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75,503,137
Christopher Worrell (politician)
Christopher Worrell (born 1985/86) is an American state politician from Boston, Massachusetts. He is the brother of Brian Worrell, who is the city councilor for Boston District 4, and he is also a Black man. Worrell grew up with his brother Brian Worrell on Hewins Street in Dorchester. His parents had moved to Boston from the Caribbean. In his youth, he participated in METCO; later, he attended Bunker Hill Community College in Charlestown. In September 2022, Worrell won the Democratic Party primary elections. The Boston Globe endorsed Worrell for the state house election. On March 18, 2023, he and his brother opened an office together at 5 Erie Street in Dorchester to provide community support. The office's opening ceremony was attended by several local politicians. The office is open on weekdays from noon to 6pm. Worrell supports efforts to fight racism and encourage diversity, a progressive tax, unions, expanded educational opportunities, Affordable housing, and more Public transit. He and his brother are also supporting a bill to reform Boston's liquor license system. Worrell lives with his wife, Suzette, and two kids, named Carter and Savannah.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Christopher Worrell (born 1985/86) is an American state politician from Boston, Massachusetts. He is the brother of Brian Worrell, who is the city councilor for Boston District 4, and he is also a Black man.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Worrell grew up with his brother Brian Worrell on Hewins Street in Dorchester. His parents had moved to Boston from the Caribbean. In his youth, he participated in METCO; later, he attended Bunker Hill Community College in Charlestown.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In September 2022, Worrell won the Democratic Party primary elections. The Boston Globe endorsed Worrell for the state house election.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On March 18, 2023, he and his brother opened an office together at 5 Erie Street in Dorchester to provide community support. The office's opening ceremony was attended by several local politicians. The office is open on weekdays from noon to 6pm.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Worrell supports efforts to fight racism and encourage diversity, a progressive tax, unions, expanded educational opportunities, Affordable housing, and more Public transit. He and his brother are also supporting a bill to reform Boston's liquor license system.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Worrell lives with his wife, Suzette, and two kids, named Carter and Savannah.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Christopher Worrell is an American state politician from Boston, Massachusetts. He is the brother of Brian Worrell, who is the city councilor for Boston District 4, and he is also a Black man.
2023-12-06T22:38:33Z
2023-12-07T01:34:40Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Worrell_(politician)
75,503,140
Liam McCarthy (cricketer)
Liam McCarthy is a South African-born Irish cricketer, currently playing for Munster Reds in domestic cricket. He plays club cricket for Railway Union where he is the club captain. Originally from Johannesburg, McCarthy came to Ireland in 2019 to play for Railway Union. He has Irish heritage through both his great-grandmother and great-grandfather. He was called up to the Munster Reds squad for an Interprovincial T20 round in Comber in September 2021. He made his T20 debut on 17 September against Northern Knights. He would go on to make his List A debut for Munster on 5 May 2022 against the Knights. He took 3 wickets in the 2022 List A season and 2 in the T20 competition. McCarthy enjoyed a much improved 2023, finishing as the joint top wicket taker in the Interprovincial Cup with 15 dismissals. He also took 6 wickets in T20s. In a List A match against North West Warriors on 4 September he took his first career five-wicket haul, returning figures of 5/16. McCarthy received a call-up to the Emerging Ireland squad to tour the West Indies in November 2023. He played two List A games on the tour before making his First-class debut against West Indies Academy on 2 December.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Liam McCarthy is a South African-born Irish cricketer, currently playing for Munster Reds in domestic cricket. He plays club cricket for Railway Union where he is the club captain.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Originally from Johannesburg, McCarthy came to Ireland in 2019 to play for Railway Union. He has Irish heritage through both his great-grandmother and great-grandfather.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "He was called up to the Munster Reds squad for an Interprovincial T20 round in Comber in September 2021. He made his T20 debut on 17 September against Northern Knights.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "He would go on to make his List A debut for Munster on 5 May 2022 against the Knights. He took 3 wickets in the 2022 List A season and 2 in the T20 competition.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "McCarthy enjoyed a much improved 2023, finishing as the joint top wicket taker in the Interprovincial Cup with 15 dismissals. He also took 6 wickets in T20s. In a List A match against North West Warriors on 4 September he took his first career five-wicket haul, returning figures of 5/16.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "McCarthy received a call-up to the Emerging Ireland squad to tour the West Indies in November 2023.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "He played two List A games on the tour before making his First-class debut against West Indies Academy on 2 December.", "title": "International career" } ]
Liam McCarthy is a South African-born Irish cricketer, currently playing for Munster Reds in domestic cricket. He plays club cricket for Railway Union where he is the club captain.
2023-12-06T22:38:54Z
2023-12-25T06:48:13Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liam_McCarthy_(cricketer)
75,503,179
Ryosuke Ohtsu
Ryosuke Ohtsu (大津 亮介, Ohtsu Ryōsuke, born January 13, 1999) is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Ryosuke Ohtsu (大津 亮介, Ohtsu Ryōsuke, born January 13, 1999) is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).", "title": "" } ]
Ryosuke Ohtsu is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).
2023-12-06T22:43:22Z
2023-12-06T22:50:07Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryosuke_Ohtsu
75,503,206
Väinö Vehkonen
Väinö Vehkonen (born 23 July 2001) is a Finnish professional football defender for Veikkausliiga club Ekenäs IF.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Väinö Vehkonen (born 23 July 2001) is a Finnish professional football defender for Veikkausliiga club Ekenäs IF.", "title": "" } ]
Väinö Vehkonen is a Finnish professional football defender for Veikkausliiga club Ekenäs IF.
2023-12-06T22:47:11Z
2023-12-06T22:51:26Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A4in%C3%B6_Vehkonen
75,503,220
G6911 Ankang–Laifeng Expressway
The G6911 Ankang–Laifeng Expressway (Chinese: 安康—来凤高速公路), also referred to as the Anlai Expressway (Chinese: 安来高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Ankang, Shaanxi and Laifeng, Hebei. The Shaanxi section is divided into the Pingzhen Expressway, which opened on 28 August 2020, and the Wuzhen Expressway, which opened on 4 December 2023. The Fengxi Expressway is an expressway that starts from Fengjie County and ends in Wuxi County with a total length of 46.4 kilometers. The expressway was built by the China Communications Construction Company, costing a total of 5.438 billion yuan, and was opened to traffic on 30 December 2013. The route in Hubei travels via Enshi City before terminating in Laifeng County.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The G6911 Ankang–Laifeng Expressway (Chinese: 安康—来凤高速公路), also referred to as the Anlai Expressway (Chinese: 安来高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Ankang, Shaanxi and Laifeng, Hebei.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The Shaanxi section is divided into the Pingzhen Expressway, which opened on 28 August 2020, and the Wuzhen Expressway, which opened on 4 December 2023.", "title": "Route" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The Fengxi Expressway is an expressway that starts from Fengjie County and ends in Wuxi County with a total length of 46.4 kilometers. The expressway was built by the China Communications Construction Company, costing a total of 5.438 billion yuan, and was opened to traffic on 30 December 2013.", "title": "Route" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The route in Hubei travels via Enshi City before terminating in Laifeng County.", "title": "Route" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
The G6911 Ankang–Laifeng Expressway, also referred to as the Anlai Expressway, is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Ankang, Shaanxi and Laifeng, Hebei.
2023-12-06T22:48:46Z
2023-12-12T12:43:52Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G6911_Ankang%E2%80%93Laifeng_Expressway
75,503,223
Little Shoal Bay
Little Shoal Bay is a bay of the Waitematā Harbour in Auckland, New Zealand. It is located on the North Shore, separating Birkenhead from Northcote. The Birkenhead and Northcote wharves are located at opposite sides of the bay. Little Shoal Bay is located on the North Shore, separating Birkenhead from Northcote, to the west of Shoal Bay. Halls Beach is found at Northcote in Little Shoal Bay. which is the location of Halls Beach. Le Roys Bush is an area of remnant native forest adjacent to Little Shoal Bay, which features an unnamed stream that flows into the bay. The traditional Tāmaki Māori name for Halls Beach is Onepoto, meaning "Short Beach"; a name which also referred to Sulphur Beach. The upper reaches of the bay were called Wai-manawa, referring to the mangroves that grew here. The southernmost shores of the bay were known as Okawau, referencing the Little black cormorant (kawau) that would congregate here. The Little Shoal Bay area was used for fishing and gathering shellfish, and was the location of kāinga, gardens, and a wāhi tapu. Te Onewa Pā was constructed at the Northcote headland to the south of Little Shoal Bay, was prized for its strategic location and view over the Waitematā Harbour, and protected fisheries and kūmara gardens of the nearby volcanic soil. In 1856, the Northcote Wharf was constructed at the mouth of Little Shoal Bay. In 1870, Peter Hall of the Winks and Hall cabinet makers settled at Little Shoal Bay. He became the namesake of Halls Beach. From the 1840s, European settlers developed brickworks along Shoal Bay, the earliest being at Stanley Bay Beach. This was followed by Phillip Callan's brickyard at Sulphur Beach in 1843. From 1848, a soap and candle factory was established on Sulphur Beach, and other early industries included timber milling and kauri gum digging. In 1878, Auckland Chemical Works was established at Northcote, on the beach next to the brickworks. The factory processed sulphur from Moutohora Island in the Bay of Plenty, but was unprofitable, as the amount of sulphur estimated to be on the island was overestimated. In 1902, the Birkenhead and Northcote Gas Company established a gasworks at Little Shoal Bay. By the 1920s, the gas works had become the biggest sole employer for the Northcote Borough, and in the 1950s the gasworks was shut down. Boatbuilder Jim Young established his first boatyard at Little Shoal Bay in Birkenhead in the 1940s. In 1959, the Auckland Harbour Bridge and Auckland Northern Motorway were opened in Auckland, crossing the Waitematā Harbour, to the south-east of Little Shoal Bay. In 1971, a seafood restaurant called Fisherman's Wharf was built by restaurateur Bob Sell, adjacent to Northcote wharf. While the restaurant closed two years later, the building is currently known as The Wharf, an events centre. The Little Shoal Bay area is home to recreational facilities, including a tennis court, petanque court, basketball hoop and boardwalk.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Little Shoal Bay is a bay of the Waitematā Harbour in Auckland, New Zealand. It is located on the North Shore, separating Birkenhead from Northcote. The Birkenhead and Northcote wharves are located at opposite sides of the bay.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Little Shoal Bay is located on the North Shore, separating Birkenhead from Northcote, to the west of Shoal Bay. Halls Beach is found at Northcote in Little Shoal Bay. which is the location of Halls Beach. Le Roys Bush is an area of remnant native forest adjacent to Little Shoal Bay, which features an unnamed stream that flows into the bay.", "title": "Geography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The traditional Tāmaki Māori name for Halls Beach is Onepoto, meaning \"Short Beach\"; a name which also referred to Sulphur Beach. The upper reaches of the bay were called Wai-manawa, referring to the mangroves that grew here. The southernmost shores of the bay were known as Okawau, referencing the Little black cormorant (kawau) that would congregate here. The Little Shoal Bay area was used for fishing and gathering shellfish, and was the location of kāinga, gardens, and a wāhi tapu.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Te Onewa Pā was constructed at the Northcote headland to the south of Little Shoal Bay, was prized for its strategic location and view over the Waitematā Harbour, and protected fisheries and kūmara gardens of the nearby volcanic soil.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 1856, the Northcote Wharf was constructed at the mouth of Little Shoal Bay. In 1870, Peter Hall of the Winks and Hall cabinet makers settled at Little Shoal Bay. He became the namesake of Halls Beach.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "From the 1840s, European settlers developed brickworks along Shoal Bay, the earliest being at Stanley Bay Beach. This was followed by Phillip Callan's brickyard at Sulphur Beach in 1843. From 1848, a soap and candle factory was established on Sulphur Beach, and other early industries included timber milling and kauri gum digging. In 1878, Auckland Chemical Works was established at Northcote, on the beach next to the brickworks. The factory processed sulphur from Moutohora Island in the Bay of Plenty, but was unprofitable, as the amount of sulphur estimated to be on the island was overestimated.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 1902, the Birkenhead and Northcote Gas Company established a gasworks at Little Shoal Bay. By the 1920s, the gas works had become the biggest sole employer for the Northcote Borough, and in the 1950s the gasworks was shut down.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Boatbuilder Jim Young established his first boatyard at Little Shoal Bay in Birkenhead in the 1940s.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "In 1959, the Auckland Harbour Bridge and Auckland Northern Motorway were opened in Auckland, crossing the Waitematā Harbour, to the south-east of Little Shoal Bay. In 1971, a seafood restaurant called Fisherman's Wharf was built by restaurateur Bob Sell, adjacent to Northcote wharf. While the restaurant closed two years later, the building is currently known as The Wharf, an events centre.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "The Little Shoal Bay area is home to recreational facilities, including a tennis court, petanque court, basketball hoop and boardwalk.", "title": "History" } ]
Little Shoal Bay is a bay of the Waitematā Harbour in Auckland, New Zealand. It is located on the North Shore, separating Birkenhead from Northcote. The Birkenhead and Northcote wharves are located at opposite sides of the bay.
2023-12-06T22:49:22Z
2023-12-26T15:49:48Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Shoal_Bay
75,503,243
Outreach Catholic
Outreach (formally known as Outreach: An LGBTQ Catholic Resource) is a Catholic news and opinion site for LGBTQ Catholics. The organization was founded by Jesuit priest James Martin in conjunction with America Magazine. The site features news stories, opinion pieces and resources pertaining to the Catholic Church and the LGBTQ community. The website itself opens with a large heading which states "Welcome. God loves you." in bold lettering. The website provides a list of social media accounts for Facebook, X, Instagram, and YouTube. It also includes a link to the suicide hotline website and links to LGBT Catholic and non-Catholic resources. These include a link to the list of LGBT friendly Catholic Churches provided by New Ways Ministry, and a list of 98 LGBT friendly Catholic Organizations. The website also features a section titles "The Outreach Guide to the Bible and Homosexuality." This section encompasses a variety of voices, scholarly, theological, and magisterial; who go through and dismantle biblical arguments against homosexuality. Outreach was founded in 2022 by James Martin, S.J. after he published his 2017 book Building a Bridge, in which he called for the Catholic hierarchy to treat LGBTQ Catholics with "respect, compassion and sensitivity" in the wake of the Orlando Pulse Night Club shooting. Every year over the summer (usually during Pride Month), Outreach holds a conference with several keynote speakers, discussion panels, resources, and mass. Outreach has employed support from DignityUSA and New Ways Ministry, and Catholic LGBT organizations and support networks. The organization's website includes a new section called "The Gaudete" which features articles from Christian (primarily Catholic) writers pertaining to LGBT issues. These articles come from journalists, priests, authors, laity, psychologists, academics, and theologians. The articles cover a plurality of topics regarding LGBT issues. Topics cover issues on gender, race, religious trauma, sexual ethics, transgender identity and politics within the catholic Church. Pope Francis: In the 2022 Outreach conference, Pope Francis sent a letter to the organizations stating: Dear brother, Thank you for the letter you sent me a few weeks ago, along with the “Outreach 2022” brochure. Congratulations for having been able to make the event happen this year in person. I am aware that the most valuable thing is not what appears in the brochure or in the photos, but what happened in interpersonal encounters. In fact, the pandemic made us seek alternatives to shorten the distances. It also taught us that certain things are irreplaceable, among them the possibility to look at each other “face to face,” even with those who think differently or those whose differences seem to separate or even confront us. When we overcome these barriers, we realize that there is more that unites us than separates us. I encourage you all to keep working in the culture of encounter, which shortens the distances and enriches us with differences, in the same manner of Jesus, who made himself close to everyone. I assure you of my prayers. Don’t stop praying for me. May Jesus bless you and the Blessed Virgin care for you. Fraternally, Francis In the 2023 conference, Pope Francis sent another greeting which stated "I send my best regards to the members of the meeting at Fordham University,” telling the members to pray for him as he is praying for them. Catholic Hierarchy: Many members of the magisterium have personally contributed to the articles in the Gaudete, including Bishop John Dolan, Archbishop Mark Coleridge, Bishop John Stowe, and Charles Bouchard OP. Other clergy have given responses to Outreach conferences; Cardinal Dolan, the archbishop of New York City, sent a letter to James Martin during the 2023 Outreach conference stating, “It is the sacred duty of the Church and Her ministers to reach out to those on the periphery and draw them to a closer relationship with Jesus Christ and His Church. Your vital and important ministry is a valuable and necessary contribution to that effort.” Archbishop Lori of Baltimore sent an email to James Martin in regards to the Outreach organization. Archbishop Lori stated his regret that the Catholic Church has caused much harm and trauma to LGBT Catholics. He further quoted the Catechism calling for more compassion and charity when ministering to LGBT Catholics. He further clarified, however, that the Church's teachings on sexual ethics can not change and provides a list of 6 pastoral guidelines for LGBT+ Catholics. 1. Pastoral accompaniment recognizes the reality of our need. This need is the shared desire of all persons to find “intimacy with the Triune God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” 2. Pastoral accompaniment shows compassion, respect, and sensitivity. In communion with the pastoral vision of Pope Francis, “LGBT persons are not a problem to be solved.” Instead, they are persons to be loved. 3. Pastoral accompaniment journeys together in light of our calling. That calling is to a life of holiness, which is guided by both “the teaching authority of the Church” and the Holy Spirit. 4. Pastoral accompaniment has a different kind of conversation. This is not a conversation full of polemics and “false dichotomies,” but a conversation that stands us squarely in the public forum “to be a light to the nations.” 5. Pastoral accompaniment lives rooted in the Church. Archbishop Lori reminds his flock that “the Church is not a club or a political party.” It is the Body of Christ, a place where everybody should feel like they belong. 6. Pastoral accompaniment is willing to make the long journey. The path toward discipleship is “long and challenging,” the archbishop writes. But Christ “is alive and active here and now.”
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Outreach (formally known as Outreach: An LGBTQ Catholic Resource) is a Catholic news and opinion site for LGBTQ Catholics. The organization was founded by Jesuit priest James Martin in conjunction with America Magazine. The site features news stories, opinion pieces and resources pertaining to the Catholic Church and the LGBTQ community.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The website itself opens with a large heading which states \"Welcome. God loves you.\" in bold lettering. The website provides a list of social media accounts for Facebook, X, Instagram, and YouTube. It also includes a link to the suicide hotline website and links to LGBT Catholic and non-Catholic resources. These include a link to the list of LGBT friendly Catholic Churches provided by New Ways Ministry, and a list of 98 LGBT friendly Catholic Organizations.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The website also features a section titles \"The Outreach Guide to the Bible and Homosexuality.\" This section encompasses a variety of voices, scholarly, theological, and magisterial; who go through and dismantle biblical arguments against homosexuality.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Outreach was founded in 2022 by James Martin, S.J. after he published his 2017 book Building a Bridge, in which he called for the Catholic hierarchy to treat LGBTQ Catholics with \"respect, compassion and sensitivity\" in the wake of the Orlando Pulse Night Club shooting. Every year over the summer (usually during Pride Month), Outreach holds a conference with several keynote speakers, discussion panels, resources, and mass. Outreach has employed support from DignityUSA and New Ways Ministry, and Catholic LGBT organizations and support networks.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The organization's website includes a new section called \"The Gaudete\" which features articles from Christian (primarily Catholic) writers pertaining to LGBT issues. These articles come from journalists, priests, authors, laity, psychologists, academics, and theologians. The articles cover a plurality of topics regarding LGBT issues. Topics cover issues on gender, race, religious trauma, sexual ethics, transgender identity and politics within the catholic Church.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Pope Francis:", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In the 2022 Outreach conference, Pope Francis sent a letter to the organizations stating:", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Dear brother,", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Thank you for the letter you sent me a few weeks ago, along with the “Outreach 2022” brochure. Congratulations for having been able to make the event happen this year in person.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "I am aware that the most valuable thing is not what appears in the brochure or in the photos, but what happened in interpersonal encounters. In fact, the pandemic made us seek alternatives to shorten the distances. It also taught us that certain things are irreplaceable, among them the possibility to look at each other “face to face,” even with those who think differently or those whose differences seem to separate or even confront us. When we overcome these barriers, we realize that there is more that unites us than separates us.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "I encourage you all to keep working in the culture of encounter, which shortens the distances and enriches us with differences, in the same manner of Jesus, who made himself close to everyone.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "I assure you of my prayers. Don’t stop praying for me. May Jesus bless you and the Blessed Virgin care for you.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "Fraternally,", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 13, "text": "Francis", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 14, "text": "In the 2023 conference, Pope Francis sent another greeting which stated \"I send my best regards to the members of the meeting at Fordham University,” telling the members to pray for him as he is praying for them.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 15, "text": "Catholic Hierarchy:", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 16, "text": "Many members of the magisterium have personally contributed to the articles in the Gaudete, including Bishop John Dolan, Archbishop Mark Coleridge, Bishop John Stowe, and Charles Bouchard OP. Other clergy have given responses to Outreach conferences; Cardinal Dolan, the archbishop of New York City, sent a letter to James Martin during the 2023 Outreach conference stating, “It is the sacred duty of the Church and Her ministers to reach out to those on the periphery and draw them to a closer relationship with Jesus Christ and His Church. Your vital and important ministry is a valuable and necessary contribution to that effort.”", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 17, "text": "Archbishop Lori of Baltimore sent an email to James Martin in regards to the Outreach organization. Archbishop Lori stated his regret that the Catholic Church has caused much harm and trauma to LGBT Catholics. He further quoted the Catechism calling for more compassion and charity when ministering to LGBT Catholics. He further clarified, however, that the Church's teachings on sexual ethics can not change and provides a list of 6 pastoral guidelines for LGBT+ Catholics.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 18, "text": "1. Pastoral accompaniment recognizes the reality of our need. This need is the shared desire of all persons to find “intimacy with the Triune God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 19, "text": "2. Pastoral accompaniment shows compassion, respect, and sensitivity. In communion with the pastoral vision of Pope Francis, “LGBT persons are not a problem to be solved.” Instead, they are persons to be loved.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 20, "text": "3. Pastoral accompaniment journeys together in light of our calling. That calling is to a life of holiness, which is guided by both “the teaching authority of the Church” and the Holy Spirit.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 21, "text": "4. Pastoral accompaniment has a different kind of conversation. This is not a conversation full of polemics and “false dichotomies,” but a conversation that stands us squarely in the public forum “to be a light to the nations.”", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 22, "text": "5. Pastoral accompaniment lives rooted in the Church. Archbishop Lori reminds his flock that “the Church is not a club or a political party.” It is the Body of Christ, a place where everybody should feel like they belong.", "title": "Reactions" }, { "paragraph_id": 23, "text": "6. Pastoral accompaniment is willing to make the long journey. The path toward discipleship is “long and challenging,” the archbishop writes. But Christ “is alive and active here and now.”", "title": "Reactions" } ]
Outreach is a Catholic news and opinion site for LGBTQ Catholics. The organization was founded by Jesuit priest James Martin in conjunction with America Magazine. The site features news stories, opinion pieces and resources pertaining to the Catholic Church and the LGBTQ community. The website itself opens with a large heading which states "Welcome. God loves you." in bold lettering. The website provides a list of social media accounts for Facebook, X, Instagram, and YouTube. It also includes a link to the suicide hotline website and links to LGBT Catholic and non-Catholic resources. These include a link to the list of LGBT friendly Catholic Churches provided by New Ways Ministry, and a list of 98 LGBT friendly Catholic Organizations. The website also features a section titles "The Outreach Guide to the Bible and Homosexuality." This section encompasses a variety of voices, scholarly, theological, and magisterial; who go through and dismantle biblical arguments against homosexuality.
2023-12-06T22:52:50Z
2023-12-24T06:53:39Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outreach_Catholic
75,503,245
List of Neighbours characters (2024)
Neighbours is an Australian television soap opera. It was first broadcast on 18 March 1985 and airs on streaming channel Amazon Freevee. The following is a list of characters that first appear in the show in 2024, by order of first appearance. All characters are introduced by the show's executive producer Jason Herbison. Amira Devkar, played by Maria Thattil, will make her first appearance in 2024. The character and Thattil's casting details were announced on 7 December 2023. Thattil began filming her guest role during the same week. Of her casting, she explained that she sent in a self-taped audition for another character when the serial began casting for the new series, which the producers "loved" and she received a call back for Amira instead. Thattil felt that she was joining the show at the right time and the opportunity was "so aligned to my deepest values". She continued: "I genuinely can't remember ever seeing a gay female South Asian Australian character on an Aussie TV show in my childhood and I always wonder how proper representation – beyond tokenism or exaggerated caricatures – would've changed some of my experiences with racism, homophobia, feeling like I didn't belong, wasn't normal or Australian enough. This role feels 'full circle' because it's giving me the chance to be the authentic representation that I, and wider Australia, has needed." Thattil's character is the older sister of Haz Devkar (Shiv Palekar), who was introduced in 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Neighbours is an Australian television soap opera. It was first broadcast on 18 March 1985 and airs on streaming channel Amazon Freevee. The following is a list of characters that first appear in the show in 2024, by order of first appearance. All characters are introduced by the show's executive producer Jason Herbison.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Amira Devkar, played by Maria Thattil, will make her first appearance in 2024. The character and Thattil's casting details were announced on 7 December 2023. Thattil began filming her guest role during the same week. Of her casting, she explained that she sent in a self-taped audition for another character when the serial began casting for the new series, which the producers \"loved\" and she received a call back for Amira instead. Thattil felt that she was joining the show at the right time and the opportunity was \"so aligned to my deepest values\". She continued: \"I genuinely can't remember ever seeing a gay female South Asian Australian character on an Aussie TV show in my childhood and I always wonder how proper representation – beyond tokenism or exaggerated caricatures – would've changed some of my experiences with racism, homophobia, feeling like I didn't belong, wasn't normal or Australian enough. This role feels 'full circle' because it's giving me the chance to be the authentic representation that I, and wider Australia, has needed.\" Thattil's character is the older sister of Haz Devkar (Shiv Palekar), who was introduced in 2023.", "title": "Amira Devkar" } ]
Neighbours is an Australian television soap opera. It was first broadcast on 18 March 1985 and airs on streaming channel Amazon Freevee. The following is a list of characters that first appear in the show in 2024, by order of first appearance. All characters are introduced by the show's executive producer Jason Herbison.
2023-12-06T22:53:00Z
2023-12-07T03:17:48Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Neighbours characters" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Neighbours_characters_(2024)
75,503,269
Victoria Villasana
Victoria Villasana (1982) is a Mexican textile and street artist. Villasana was born in 1982 in Guadalajara, Mexico and lives in England and Mexico. She studied design at ITESO University in Mexico. Villasana moved to London, England where she created street art. She also explored careers as a florist and fashion designer before returning to painting, street art, and collages. Villasana is known for her use of yarn in paintings and street art.[6] Her themes include feminism, cross culturalism, and social issues.[4] Her work continues to be shown in galleries, commercial work, and social projects.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Victoria Villasana (1982) is a Mexican textile and street artist.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Villasana was born in 1982 in Guadalajara, Mexico and lives in England and Mexico. She studied design at ITESO University in Mexico. Villasana moved to London, England where she created street art. She also explored careers as a florist and fashion designer before returning to painting, street art, and collages.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Villasana is known for her use of yarn in paintings and street art.[6] Her themes include feminism, cross culturalism, and social issues.[4] Her work continues to be shown in galleries, commercial work, and social projects.", "title": "Art" } ]
Victoria Villasana (1982) is a Mexican textile and street artist.
2023-12-06T22:55:41Z
2023-12-26T18:15:29Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Villasana
75,503,284
Gene Gallerano
Gene Gallerano is an American producer, filmmaker, screenwriter, and actor. Gallerano started his career in the entertainment industry as an actor in a bit role in the film Bottle Rocket. He is also the co-founder of The Neboya Collective. In 2012, he won Harlem Film Festival award. Producer Actor Director
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Gene Gallerano is an American producer, filmmaker, screenwriter, and actor.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Gallerano started his career in the entertainment industry as an actor in a bit role in the film Bottle Rocket. He is also the co-founder of The Neboya Collective.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 2012, he won Harlem Film Festival award.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Producer", "title": "Filmography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Actor", "title": "Filmography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Director", "title": "Filmography" } ]
Gene Gallerano is an American producer, filmmaker, screenwriter, and actor.
2023-12-06T22:58:18Z
2023-12-19T18:28:56Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox person", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:IMDb name" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_Gallerano
75,503,293
Nacer Chahat
Nacer E. Chahat is a French Algerian-American engineer and researcher at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Chahat was born in Angers, France to a family of Algerian descent. He was educated at Palissy High School. He obtained his master's degrees in electrical engineering from Ecole Supérieure d'Ingénieurs de Rennes (ESIR) and in telecommunication from the Institute of Electronics and Telecommunications of Rennes (IETR), University of Rennes 1 in 2009. He completed his Ph.D. in signal processing and telecommunications at the IETR, University of Rennes 1, in 2012. Chahat has been associated with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), since 2013. Initially, he joined as a Microwave/Antenna Engineer and later took on the roles of Technical Section Staff and Product Delivery Manager in 2017. He became SWOT Payload System engineer in 2019. At NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Chahat has contributed to several projects, including the Mars Helicopter, Mars 2020, SWOT, Europa Clipper, Mars Cube One, RaInCube, and others. On April 19, 2021, Chahat was part of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory team that successfully made Ingenuity, the first powered-controlled aircraft to fly on another planet. In 2022, Chahat was named an IEEE Fellow, recognized for his contributions to spacecraft antennas and propagation, and became one of the youngest fellows of IEEE. Chahat specializes in antenna design and electromagnetic interference and compatibility (EMI/EMC) analysis for space missions. He also works across a wide range of frequencies, from UHF to THz, applied in communications, RADAR, imaging systems, satellite communications antennas, wearable and flexible antennas, and antennas for remote sensing and radio astronomy. Chahat's notable contributions to NASA missions include the design of the Raincube Ka-band deployable mesh reflector, the Mars Cube One X-band antennas, the Europa lander antenna, and communication tools for the Mars Helicopter mission.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Nacer E. Chahat is a French Algerian-American engineer and researcher at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Chahat was born in Angers, France to a family of Algerian descent. He was educated at Palissy High School. He obtained his master's degrees in electrical engineering from Ecole Supérieure d'Ingénieurs de Rennes (ESIR) and in telecommunication from the Institute of Electronics and Telecommunications of Rennes (IETR), University of Rennes 1 in 2009. He completed his Ph.D. in signal processing and telecommunications at the IETR, University of Rennes 1, in 2012.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Chahat has been associated with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), since 2013. Initially, he joined as a Microwave/Antenna Engineer and later took on the roles of Technical Section Staff and Product Delivery Manager in 2017. He became SWOT Payload System engineer in 2019.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "At NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Chahat has contributed to several projects, including the Mars Helicopter, Mars 2020, SWOT, Europa Clipper, Mars Cube One, RaInCube, and others.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "On April 19, 2021, Chahat was part of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory team that successfully made Ingenuity, the first powered-controlled aircraft to fly on another planet.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2022, Chahat was named an IEEE Fellow, recognized for his contributions to spacecraft antennas and propagation, and became one of the youngest fellows of IEEE.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Chahat specializes in antenna design and electromagnetic interference and compatibility (EMI/EMC) analysis for space missions. He also works across a wide range of frequencies, from UHF to THz, applied in communications, RADAR, imaging systems, satellite communications antennas, wearable and flexible antennas, and antennas for remote sensing and radio astronomy.", "title": "Research" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Chahat's notable contributions to NASA missions include the design of the Raincube Ka-band deployable mesh reflector, the Mars Cube One X-band antennas, the Europa lander antenna, and communication tools for the Mars Helicopter mission.", "title": "Research" } ]
Nacer E. Chahat is a French Algerian-American engineer and researcher at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
2023-12-06T22:59:38Z
2023-12-19T04:49:19Z
[ "Template:Infobox person", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nacer_Chahat
75,503,297
Captaincy of Cumã
The Captaincy of Cumã (Portuguese: Capitania de Cumã) was one of the administrative subdivisions of the Brazilian territory during the colonial period in Portuguese America. Created in 1627 and donated to Antônio Coelho de Carvalho, it was called the Captaincy of Tapuitapera or Alcântara. Until 1612, the region of the Captaincy of Cumã was inhabited by a group of villages called Tapuitapera. The French who arrived there, led by Daniel de La Touche, established friendships with these communities and built the first chapel a short time later. Between 1616 and 1618, the Portuguese began the process of occupying the region after the expulsion of the French. With the division of territories in the area, Tapuitapera became the seat of the Captaincy of Cumã. During the Dutch invasion of 1641, the Portuguese lost possession of the land. In 1646, after reclaiming the area, Tapuitapera was elevated to the town of Santo Antônio de Alcântara and began to be active with sugar mills and cotton production. The site also had a Town Hall, a pillory and a Parish Church. In the second half of the 18th century, Portuguese policy consisted in the repossession of the hereditary captaincies to the Crown. A Royal Letter from 1753 found in the Resgate Project mentions that the Captaincy of Cumã was bought and reincorporated into the Kingdom of Portugal. However, subsequent documents mention the area as a captaincy, without specifying if it was a royal or private territory, which creates doubts about when the incorporation took place and whether this resulted in the extinction of the captaincy or not. Geographically, the Captaincy of Cumã occupied the region between the mouths of the Mearim, Pindaré and Turiaçu rivers. Later, Alcântara became the largest production center in Maranhão, rivaling São Luís when the local economy was based on cotton and slave labor. In 1836, Alcântara was elevated to city status and reached its economic peak. In 1948, IPHAN listed the architectural and urban complex of Alcântara composed of approximately 400 buildings because of its important Portuguese-Brazilian colonial architecture, consolidated throughout the 17th century. The collection includes buildings such as the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary of Black Men, the Church and ruins of the Convent of Mount Carmel, the ruins of the Mother Church of Saint Matthias, the Ladeira do Jacaré, the Chapel of Our Lady of Desterro (now the Church of Saint Joseph), the Stone Fountain, the Alcântara Historical House Museum, the Alcântara Historical Museum, the ruins of the São Sebastião Fort, the Town Hall and Jail, the House of the Divine and the Cavalo de Troia Manor House.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Captaincy of Cumã (Portuguese: Capitania de Cumã) was one of the administrative subdivisions of the Brazilian territory during the colonial period in Portuguese America. Created in 1627 and donated to Antônio Coelho de Carvalho, it was called the Captaincy of Tapuitapera or Alcântara.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Until 1612, the region of the Captaincy of Cumã was inhabited by a group of villages called Tapuitapera. The French who arrived there, led by Daniel de La Touche, established friendships with these communities and built the first chapel a short time later. Between 1616 and 1618, the Portuguese began the process of occupying the region after the expulsion of the French. With the division of territories in the area, Tapuitapera became the seat of the Captaincy of Cumã.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "During the Dutch invasion of 1641, the Portuguese lost possession of the land. In 1646, after reclaiming the area, Tapuitapera was elevated to the town of Santo Antônio de Alcântara and began to be active with sugar mills and cotton production. The site also had a Town Hall, a pillory and a Parish Church. In the second half of the 18th century, Portuguese policy consisted in the repossession of the hereditary captaincies to the Crown. A Royal Letter from 1753 found in the Resgate Project mentions that the Captaincy of Cumã was bought and reincorporated into the Kingdom of Portugal. However, subsequent documents mention the area as a captaincy, without specifying if it was a royal or private territory, which creates doubts about when the incorporation took place and whether this resulted in the extinction of the captaincy or not. Geographically, the Captaincy of Cumã occupied the region between the mouths of the Mearim, Pindaré and Turiaçu rivers.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Later, Alcântara became the largest production center in Maranhão, rivaling São Luís when the local economy was based on cotton and slave labor. In 1836, Alcântara was elevated to city status and reached its economic peak.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 1948, IPHAN listed the architectural and urban complex of Alcântara composed of approximately 400 buildings because of its important Portuguese-Brazilian colonial architecture, consolidated throughout the 17th century. The collection includes buildings such as the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary of Black Men, the Church and ruins of the Convent of Mount Carmel, the ruins of the Mother Church of Saint Matthias, the Ladeira do Jacaré, the Chapel of Our Lady of Desterro (now the Church of Saint Joseph), the Stone Fountain, the Alcântara Historical House Museum, the Alcântara Historical Museum, the ruins of the São Sebastião Fort, the Town Hall and Jail, the House of the Divine and the Cavalo de Troia Manor House.", "title": "Historical Center of Alcântara" } ]
The Captaincy of Cumã was one of the administrative subdivisions of the Brazilian territory during the colonial period in Portuguese America. Created in 1627 and donated to Antônio Coelho de Carvalho, it was called the Captaincy of Tapuitapera or Alcântara.
2023-12-06T23:00:11Z
2023-12-06T23:00:11Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captaincy_of_Cum%C3%A3
75,503,318
Holly Shulman
Holly B. Shulman is an American statistician in the Division of Reproductive Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a developer of the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for the CDC, and the former president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics. As well as her work on the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, her publications include highly cited work on abortion-related deaths. Shulman is originally from Atlanta, Georgia, where she was an honors student in mathematics. Her interest in statistics began in a high school mathematics summer program, part of the Georgia Governor's Honors Program. She majored in mathematics at Georgia Tech, and went on to do a master's degree in statistics at the University of California, Berkeley. Shulman has worked for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for over 35 years. She was president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics for 1999, and chaired the American Statistical Association's Committee on Women in Statistics in 2000.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Holly B. Shulman is an American statistician in the Division of Reproductive Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a developer of the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for the CDC, and the former president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics. As well as her work on the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, her publications include highly cited work on abortion-related deaths.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Shulman is originally from Atlanta, Georgia, where she was an honors student in mathematics. Her interest in statistics began in a high school mathematics summer program, part of the Georgia Governor's Honors Program. She majored in mathematics at Georgia Tech, and went on to do a master's degree in statistics at the University of California, Berkeley.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Shulman has worked for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for over 35 years. She was president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics for 1999, and chaired the American Statistical Association's Committee on Women in Statistics in 2000.", "title": "Career and later life" } ]
Holly B. Shulman is an American statistician in the Division of Reproductive Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a developer of the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for the CDC, and the former president of the Caucus for Women in Statistics. As well as her work on the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, her publications include highly cited work on abortion-related deaths.
2023-12-06T23:02:21Z
2023-12-11T17:12:18Z
[ "Template:Use list-defined references", "Template:R", "Template:Citation", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Authority control", "Template:Short description", "Template:Use mdy dates" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holly_Shulman
75,503,344
Richard Taite
Richard Hamish Taite OBE (5 April 1911 – 5 April 1969) was an English first-class cricketer and an officer in the British Army. Taite served in the army from 1931 until 1959, seeing action in both the Second World War and the Korean War. In May 1945, he was the officer who received the German surrender of Amsterdam, for which he later decorated by the Dutch government. In cricket, Taite played first-class cricket in British India for the Europeans cricket team. The son of Richard Hamish Taite, he was born at Westminster in April 1991. He was educated at Cheltenham College, where he played for the cricket and rugby teams. From there, he attended the Royal Military College at Sandhurst and graduated into the King's Own Royal Regiment (KORR) in August 1931, with promotion to lieutenant in August 1934. He was later seconded to serve in British India, where he was attached to the Madras-based Southern Provinces Mounted Rifles with the local rank of captain. While serving there, he made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the Europeans cricket team against the Indians at Madras in the 1938–39 Madras Presidency Match. Batting twice in the match, he top-scored with 38 in the Europeans first innings before being dismissed by Gopalaswami Parthasarathy, whilst in their second innings he was dismissed without scoring by C. R. Rangachari. With the ball, he bowled 12 wicketless overs in the Indians first innings. Shortly after his lone first-class appearance, he returned to the KORR and was promoted to captain in August 1939. Taite served throughout the entirety of the Second World War, taking part in the Normandy campaign with the 34th Armoured Brigade, where he saw action at the Battle of Le Harve in September 1944. In the last days of the war, Taite served with the 49th Reconnaissance Regiment. In April 1945, he took part in the Liberation of Arnhem, where it was noted that he commanded his squadron with skill, determination and courage; he had taken over the command of the squadron mid-battle, following the wounding of its commander. Following the Allied victory at Arnhem, Taite led his squadron against the Grebbe Line and thereafter organised German surrenders at Hilversum and Bussum. On the evening of the 7 May, he led a detachment of his squadron into Amsterdam, reaching the city centre hours after the shooting on Dam square, in which German soldiers killed 30 Dutch civilians. At sunset, Taite reached the Royal Palace of Amsterdam, and there he received the surrender of the German Ortskommandant Oberstleutnant Hans A. Schröder, in preparation for its occupation by the First Canadian Army the following day. For his actions in the Netherlands, he was decorated by the Dutch with the Bronze Lion, which he received in July 1947. Ten months after the conclusion of the war, Taite was promoted to major in July 1946, with a further promotion to lieutenant colonel following in March 1952. He served in the Korean War, following which he was made an OBE in December 1953, in recognition of gallant and distinguished service during the war. He retired from active service in October 1959. Taite died in April 1969 at Huttons Ambo, Yorkshire; he was survived by his wife Cynthia (1914–2012), and their two sons.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Richard Hamish Taite OBE (5 April 1911 – 5 April 1969) was an English first-class cricketer and an officer in the British Army. Taite served in the army from 1931 until 1959, seeing action in both the Second World War and the Korean War. In May 1945, he was the officer who received the German surrender of Amsterdam, for which he later decorated by the Dutch government. In cricket, Taite played first-class cricket in British India for the Europeans cricket team.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The son of Richard Hamish Taite, he was born at Westminster in April 1991. He was educated at Cheltenham College, where he played for the cricket and rugby teams. From there, he attended the Royal Military College at Sandhurst and graduated into the King's Own Royal Regiment (KORR) in August 1931, with promotion to lieutenant in August 1934. He was later seconded to serve in British India, where he was attached to the Madras-based Southern Provinces Mounted Rifles with the local rank of captain. While serving there, he made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the Europeans cricket team against the Indians at Madras in the 1938–39 Madras Presidency Match. Batting twice in the match, he top-scored with 38 in the Europeans first innings before being dismissed by Gopalaswami Parthasarathy, whilst in their second innings he was dismissed without scoring by C. R. Rangachari. With the ball, he bowled 12 wicketless overs in the Indians first innings.", "title": "Life and military service" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Shortly after his lone first-class appearance, he returned to the KORR and was promoted to captain in August 1939. Taite served throughout the entirety of the Second World War, taking part in the Normandy campaign with the 34th Armoured Brigade, where he saw action at the Battle of Le Harve in September 1944. In the last days of the war, Taite served with the 49th Reconnaissance Regiment. In April 1945, he took part in the Liberation of Arnhem, where it was noted that he commanded his squadron with skill, determination and courage; he had taken over the command of the squadron mid-battle, following the wounding of its commander. Following the Allied victory at Arnhem, Taite led his squadron against the Grebbe Line and thereafter organised German surrenders at Hilversum and Bussum. On the evening of the 7 May, he led a detachment of his squadron into Amsterdam, reaching the city centre hours after the shooting on Dam square, in which German soldiers killed 30 Dutch civilians. At sunset, Taite reached the Royal Palace of Amsterdam, and there he received the surrender of the German Ortskommandant Oberstleutnant Hans A. Schröder, in preparation for its occupation by the First Canadian Army the following day. For his actions in the Netherlands, he was decorated by the Dutch with the Bronze Lion, which he received in July 1947.", "title": "Life and military service" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Ten months after the conclusion of the war, Taite was promoted to major in July 1946, with a further promotion to lieutenant colonel following in March 1952. He served in the Korean War, following which he was made an OBE in December 1953, in recognition of gallant and distinguished service during the war. He retired from active service in October 1959. Taite died in April 1969 at Huttons Ambo, Yorkshire; he was survived by his wife Cynthia (1914–2012), and their two sons.", "title": "Life and military service" } ]
Richard Hamish Taite was an English first-class cricketer and an officer in the British Army. Taite served in the army from 1931 until 1959, seeing action in both the Second World War and the Korean War. In May 1945, he was the officer who received the German surrender of Amsterdam, for which he later decorated by the Dutch government. In cricket, Taite played first-class cricket in British India for the Europeans cricket team.
2023-12-06T23:05:25Z
2023-12-24T15:54:16Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Taite
75,503,372
Acrisure Invitational
The Acrisure Invitational is a four-team NCAA Division I college basketball tournament played on the two days following Thanksgiving, at Acrisure Arena in Thousand Palms, California. The 2023 event featured Arkansas State, Hawaii, San Diego and UT Rio Grande Valley. Game recaps: Noel Coleman of Hawaii was named most valuable player.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Acrisure Invitational is a four-team NCAA Division I college basketball tournament played on the two days following Thanksgiving, at Acrisure Arena in Thousand Palms, California.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The 2023 event featured Arkansas State, Hawaii, San Diego and UT Rio Grande Valley.", "title": "Brackets" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Game recaps:", "title": "Brackets" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Noel Coleman of Hawaii was named most valuable player.", "title": "Brackets" } ]
The Acrisure Invitational is a four-team NCAA Division I college basketball tournament played on the two days following Thanksgiving, at Acrisure Arena in Thousand Palms, California.
2023-12-06T23:10:39Z
2023-12-23T23:36:52Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:NCAA men's college basketball tournament navbox", "Template:Thanksgiving", "Template:Short description", "Template:Distinguish", "Template:Infobox Sports league", "Template:4TeamBracket" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrisure_Invitational
75,503,397
List of steganography techniques
Steganography has been widely used for centuries. Some examples include: An image or a text can be converted into a soundfile, which is then analysed with a spectrogram to reveal the image. Various artists have used this method to conceal hidden pictures in their songs, such as Aphex Twin in "Windowlicker" or Nine Inch Nails in their album Year Zero. In communities with social or government taboos or censorship, people use cultural steganography—hiding messages in idiom, pop culture references, and other messages they share publicly and assume are monitored. This relies on social context to make the underlying messages visible only to certain readers. Examples include: Since the era of evolving network applications, steganography research has shifted from image steganography to steganography in streaming media such as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP). In 2003, Giannoula et al. developed a data hiding technique leading to compressed forms of source video signals on a frame-by-frame basis. In 2005, Dittmann et al. studied steganography and watermarking of multimedia contents such as VoIP. In 2008, Yongfeng Huang and Shanyu Tang presented a novel approach to information hiding in low bit-rate VoIP speech stream, and their published work on steganography is the first-ever effort to improve the codebook partition by using Graph theory along with Quantization Index Modulation in low bit-rate streaming media. In 2011 and 2012, Yongfeng Huang and Shanyu Tang devised new steganographic algorithms that use codec parameters as cover object to realise real-time covert VoIP steganography. Their findings were published in IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security. Academic work since 2012 demonstrated the feasibility of steganography for cyber-physical systems (CPS)/the Internet of Things (IoT). Some techniques of CPS/IoT steganography overlap with network steganography, i.e. hiding data in communication protocols used in CPS/the IoT. However, specific techniques hide data in CPS components. For instance, data can be stored in unused registers of IoT/CPS components and in the states of IoT/CPS actuators. Digital steganography output may be in the form of printed documents. A message, the plaintext, may be first encrypted by traditional means, producing a ciphertext. Then, an innocuous cover text is modified in some way so as to contain the ciphertext, resulting in the stegotext. For example, the letter size, spacing, typeface, or other characteristics of a cover text can be manipulated to carry the hidden message. Only a recipient who knows the technique used can recover the message and then decrypt it. Francis Bacon developed Bacon's cipher as such a technique. The ciphertext produced by most digital steganography methods, however, is not printable. Traditional digital methods rely on perturbing noise in the channel file to hide the message, and as such, the channel file must be transmitted to the recipient with no additional noise from the transmission. Printing introduces much noise in the ciphertext, generally rendering the message unrecoverable. There are techniques that address this limitation, one notable example being ASCII Art Steganography. Although not classic steganography, some types of modern color laser printers integrate the model, serial number, and timestamps on each printout for traceability reasons using a dot-matrix code made of small, yellow dots not recognizable to the naked eye — see printer steganography for details. The art of concealing data in a puzzle can take advantage of the degrees of freedom in stating the puzzle, using the starting information to encode a key within the puzzle/puzzle image. For instance, steganography using sudoku puzzles has as many keys as there are possible solutions of a Sudoku puzzle, which is 6.71×10. In 1977, Kent concisely described the potential for covert channel signaling in general network communication protocols, even if the traffic is encrypted (in a footnote) in "Encryption-Based Protection for Interactive User/Computer Communication," Proceedings of the Fifth Data Communications Symposium, September 1977. In 1987, Girling first studied covert channels on a local area network (LAN), identified and realised three obvious covert channels (two storage channels and one timing channel), and his research paper entitled “Covert channels in LAN’s” published in IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, vol. SE-13 of 2, in February 1987. In 1989, Wolf implemented covert channels in LAN protocols, e.g. using the reserved fields, pad fields, and undefined fields in the TCP/IP protocol. In 1997, Rowland used the IP identification field, the TCP initial sequence number and acknowledge sequence number fields in TCP/IP headers to build covert channels. In 2002, Kamran Ahsan made an excellent summary of research on network steganography. In 2005, Steven J. Murdoch and Stephen Lewis contributed a chapter entitled "Embedding Covert Channels into TCP/IP" in the "Information Hiding" book published by Springer. All information hiding techniques that may be used to exchange steganograms in telecommunication networks can be classified under the general term of network steganography. This nomenclature was originally introduced by Krzysztof Szczypiorski in 2003. Contrary to typical steganographic methods that use digital media (images, audio and video files) to hide data, network steganography uses communication protocols' control elements and their intrinsic functionality. As a result, such methods can be harder to detect and eliminate. Typical network steganography methods involve modification of the properties of a single network protocol. Such modification can be applied to the protocol data unit (PDU), to the time relations between the exchanged PDUs, or both (hybrid methods). Moreover, it is feasible to utilize the relation between two or more different network protocols to enable secret communication. These applications fall under the term inter-protocol steganography. Alternatively, multiple network protocols can be used simultaneously to transfer hidden information and so-called control protocols can be embedded into steganographic communications to extend their capabilities, e.g. to allow dynamic overlay routing or the switching of utilized hiding methods and network protocols. Network steganography covers a broad spectrum of techniques, which include, among others: In 2015, a taxonomy of 109 network hiding methods was presented by Steffen Wendzel, Sebastian Zander et al. that summarized core concepts used in network steganography research. The taxonomy was developed further in recent years by several publications and authors and adjusted to new domains, such as CPS steganography.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Steganography has been widely used for centuries. Some examples include:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "An image or a text can be converted into a soundfile, which is then analysed with a spectrogram to reveal the image. Various artists have used this method to conceal hidden pictures in their songs, such as Aphex Twin in \"Windowlicker\" or Nine Inch Nails in their album Year Zero.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In communities with social or government taboos or censorship, people use cultural steganography—hiding messages in idiom, pop culture references, and other messages they share publicly and assume are monitored. This relies on social context to make the underlying messages visible only to certain readers. Examples include:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Since the era of evolving network applications, steganography research has shifted from image steganography to steganography in streaming media such as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 2003, Giannoula et al. developed a data hiding technique leading to compressed forms of source video signals on a frame-by-frame basis.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2005, Dittmann et al. studied steganography and watermarking of multimedia contents such as VoIP.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 2008, Yongfeng Huang and Shanyu Tang presented a novel approach to information hiding in low bit-rate VoIP speech stream, and their published work on steganography is the first-ever effort to improve the codebook partition by using Graph theory along with Quantization Index Modulation in low bit-rate streaming media.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In 2011 and 2012, Yongfeng Huang and Shanyu Tang devised new steganographic algorithms that use codec parameters as cover object to realise real-time covert VoIP steganography. Their findings were published in IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Academic work since 2012 demonstrated the feasibility of steganography for cyber-physical systems (CPS)/the Internet of Things (IoT). Some techniques of CPS/IoT steganography overlap with network steganography, i.e. hiding data in communication protocols used in CPS/the IoT. However, specific techniques hide data in CPS components. For instance, data can be stored in unused registers of IoT/CPS components and in the states of IoT/CPS actuators.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "Digital steganography output may be in the form of printed documents. A message, the plaintext, may be first encrypted by traditional means, producing a ciphertext. Then, an innocuous cover text is modified in some way so as to contain the ciphertext, resulting in the stegotext. For example, the letter size, spacing, typeface, or other characteristics of a cover text can be manipulated to carry the hidden message. Only a recipient who knows the technique used can recover the message and then decrypt it. Francis Bacon developed Bacon's cipher as such a technique.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "The ciphertext produced by most digital steganography methods, however, is not printable. Traditional digital methods rely on perturbing noise in the channel file to hide the message, and as such, the channel file must be transmitted to the recipient with no additional noise from the transmission. Printing introduces much noise in the ciphertext, generally rendering the message unrecoverable. There are techniques that address this limitation, one notable example being ASCII Art Steganography.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "Although not classic steganography, some types of modern color laser printers integrate the model, serial number, and timestamps on each printout for traceability reasons using a dot-matrix code made of small, yellow dots not recognizable to the naked eye — see printer steganography for details.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "The art of concealing data in a puzzle can take advantage of the degrees of freedom in stating the puzzle, using the starting information to encode a key within the puzzle/puzzle image.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 13, "text": "For instance, steganography using sudoku puzzles has as many keys as there are possible solutions of a Sudoku puzzle, which is 6.71×10.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 14, "text": "In 1977, Kent concisely described the potential for covert channel signaling in general network communication protocols, even if the traffic is encrypted (in a footnote) in \"Encryption-Based Protection for Interactive User/Computer Communication,\" Proceedings of the Fifth Data Communications Symposium, September 1977.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 15, "text": "In 1987, Girling first studied covert channels on a local area network (LAN), identified and realised three obvious covert channels (two storage channels and one timing channel), and his research paper entitled “Covert channels in LAN’s” published in IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, vol. SE-13 of 2, in February 1987.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 16, "text": "In 1989, Wolf implemented covert channels in LAN protocols, e.g. using the reserved fields, pad fields, and undefined fields in the TCP/IP protocol.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 17, "text": "In 1997, Rowland used the IP identification field, the TCP initial sequence number and acknowledge sequence number fields in TCP/IP headers to build covert channels.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 18, "text": "In 2002, Kamran Ahsan made an excellent summary of research on network steganography.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 19, "text": "In 2005, Steven J. Murdoch and Stephen Lewis contributed a chapter entitled \"Embedding Covert Channels into TCP/IP\" in the \"Information Hiding\" book published by Springer.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 20, "text": "All information hiding techniques that may be used to exchange steganograms in telecommunication networks can be classified under the general term of network steganography. This nomenclature was originally introduced by Krzysztof Szczypiorski in 2003. Contrary to typical steganographic methods that use digital media (images, audio and video files) to hide data, network steganography uses communication protocols' control elements and their intrinsic functionality. As a result, such methods can be harder to detect and eliminate.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 21, "text": "Typical network steganography methods involve modification of the properties of a single network protocol. Such modification can be applied to the protocol data unit (PDU), to the time relations between the exchanged PDUs, or both (hybrid methods).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 22, "text": "Moreover, it is feasible to utilize the relation between two or more different network protocols to enable secret communication. These applications fall under the term inter-protocol steganography. Alternatively, multiple network protocols can be used simultaneously to transfer hidden information and so-called control protocols can be embedded into steganographic communications to extend their capabilities, e.g. to allow dynamic overlay routing or the switching of utilized hiding methods and network protocols.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 23, "text": "Network steganography covers a broad spectrum of techniques, which include, among others:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 24, "text": "In 2015, a taxonomy of 109 network hiding methods was presented by Steffen Wendzel, Sebastian Zander et al. that summarized core concepts used in network steganography research. The taxonomy was developed further in recent years by several publications and authors and adjusted to new domains, such as CPS steganography.", "title": "" } ]
2023-12-06T23:14:36Z
2023-12-07T13:40:05Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_steganography_techniques
75,503,402
NUDP
NUDP may refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "NUDP may refer to:", "title": "" } ]
NUDP may refer to: National Union for Democratic Progress, political party in Liberia National Union for Democracy and Progress, several pages New United Democratic Party, political party in South Korea
2023-12-06T23:15:44Z
2023-12-07T12:25:25Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NUDP
75,503,409
List of Algerian rabbis
List of Algerian rabbis:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "List of Algerian rabbis:", "title": "" } ]
List of Algerian rabbis: Ephraim Alnaqua Saadia Ibn Danan Solomon ben Simon Duran Simeon ben Zemah Duran Sidi Fredj Halimi Maimun Najar Nathan Najar Rahamim Naouri Jacob ben Aaron Sasportas Isaac ben Sheshet Raphael Zeror Eliyahu Zini
2023-12-06T23:17:46Z
2023-12-21T17:30:00Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Jews and Judaism in Algeria" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Algerian_rabbis
75,503,416
Walid Sadi
Walid Sadi (in Arabic: وليد صادي) is an Algerian businessman and football executive. He was born on 25 November 1979, in the Oued Souf region in Algeria. Since 21 September 2023, he is the president of the Algerian Football Federation (FAF). Walid Sadi was born on 25 September 1979 in the commune of Hassani Abdelkrim, located in the El Oued province in southern Algeria. During his childhood, he left his hometown and settled in Sétif, in the eastern part of the country, due to the commercial activities in which his family was involved. He grew up in an affluent family that owns the Sadi Group, a company specializing in construction and public works. He obtained his baccalaureate degree in management and economics in 1997. At the end of July 2021, he announces his candidacy for the presidency after the end of Kheïreddine Zetchi's term. However, he ultimately decides to withdraw, and Charaf Eddine Amara wins as the sole candidate. Almost a year later, in April 2022, following Charaf Eddine Amara's resignation after Algeria's failure to qualify for the World Cup in Qatar, Walid Sadi expresses his desire to succeed as the president of the FAF. However, he does not present himself as a candidate, and Djahid Zefizef wins the election against Abdelhakim Serrar. In July 2023, Djahid Zefizef decides to resign from his position before the end of his term, following his defeat in the CAF executive committee elections. Zefizef's defeat generates significant criticism against him, ultimately leading to his resignation. In this context, Walid Sadi decides to present himself as a candidate, accompanied by two others: Abdelkrim Medouar, president of the Professional Football League (LFP), and Meziane Ighil, former coach and international player. However, the applications of all three participants are rejected, including that of Walid Sadi, reportedly due to the absence of a university diploma. Sadi responds to this refusal and confirms that his application is in compliance. The election commission grants a new deadline for the candidates to review their applications. Once the deadline expires, only Walid Sadi's candidacy is retained. On September 21, he becomes the newly elected president of the FAF. He is then received by President Abdelmajid Tebboune and FIFA President Gianni Infantino. On September 26, the same day as his official installation as president and on the eve of the announcement of the host countries for the 2025 and 2027 Africa Cup of Nations, the FAF decides to cancel Algeria's candidacy to host both tournaments. The justification for this decision is motivated by "the FAF's new approach regarding the football development strategy in Algeria." In early October, during the first meeting of the FAF's federal board chaired by Walid Sadi as the new president, the board decides to remove Abdelkrim Medouar from his position as president and suspend the Professional Football League (LFP) for "violations of laws and regulations in force".
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Walid Sadi (in Arabic: وليد صادي) is an Algerian businessman and football executive. He was born on 25 November 1979, in the Oued Souf region in Algeria. Since 21 September 2023, he is the president of the Algerian Football Federation (FAF).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Walid Sadi was born on 25 September 1979 in the commune of Hassani Abdelkrim, located in the El Oued province in southern Algeria. During his childhood, he left his hometown and settled in Sétif, in the eastern part of the country, due to the commercial activities in which his family was involved. He grew up in an affluent family that owns the Sadi Group, a company specializing in construction and public works. He obtained his baccalaureate degree in management and economics in 1997.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "At the end of July 2021, he announces his candidacy for the presidency after the end of Kheïreddine Zetchi's term. However, he ultimately decides to withdraw, and Charaf Eddine Amara wins as the sole candidate.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Almost a year later, in April 2022, following Charaf Eddine Amara's resignation after Algeria's failure to qualify for the World Cup in Qatar, Walid Sadi expresses his desire to succeed as the president of the FAF. However, he does not present himself as a candidate, and Djahid Zefizef wins the election against Abdelhakim Serrar.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In July 2023, Djahid Zefizef decides to resign from his position before the end of his term, following his defeat in the CAF executive committee elections. Zefizef's defeat generates significant criticism against him, ultimately leading to his resignation. In this context, Walid Sadi decides to present himself as a candidate, accompanied by two others: Abdelkrim Medouar, president of the Professional Football League (LFP), and Meziane Ighil, former coach and international player. However, the applications of all three participants are rejected, including that of Walid Sadi, reportedly due to the absence of a university diploma. Sadi responds to this refusal and confirms that his application is in compliance.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The election commission grants a new deadline for the candidates to review their applications. Once the deadline expires, only Walid Sadi's candidacy is retained. On September 21, he becomes the newly elected president of the FAF. He is then received by President Abdelmajid Tebboune and FIFA President Gianni Infantino.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "On September 26, the same day as his official installation as president and on the eve of the announcement of the host countries for the 2025 and 2027 Africa Cup of Nations, the FAF decides to cancel Algeria's candidacy to host both tournaments. The justification for this decision is motivated by \"the FAF's new approach regarding the football development strategy in Algeria.\"", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In early October, during the first meeting of the FAF's federal board chaired by Walid Sadi as the new president, the board decides to remove Abdelkrim Medouar from his position as president and suspend the Professional Football League (LFP) for \"violations of laws and regulations in force\".", "title": "Biography" } ]
Walid Sadi is an Algerian businessman and football executive. He was born on 25 November 1979, in the Oued Souf region in Algeria. Since 21 September 2023, he is the president of the Algerian Football Federation (FAF).
2023-12-06T23:19:10Z
2023-12-29T12:15:22Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walid_Sadi
75,503,419
Frida Cinema
The Frida Cinema is a non-profit arthouse movie theater in Santa Ana, California. The theater, named after Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, is located in the 4th Street Market shopping district of the East End neighborhood in Downtown Santa Ana. The Frida has two screens and is the only non-profit theater in Orange County, California. The theater screens vintage blockbusters, cult classics, and independent films. From 1985 until the end of 2013, the Fiesta Twin Theatre was operated as a mainstream theater screening blockbusters with Spanish-language subtitles. In February 2013, the facility was leased by Logan Crow, a cinema proprietor with previous arthouse operations in Long Beach. The Fiesta Twin Theatre remained in operation for a year under Crow's lease until it was reopened as the Frida Cinema on February 21, 2014. It opened with the 2014 edition of the South East European Film Festival. The first public screening at the Frida was a showing of Tango Abrazos, a Slovenian romantic comedy. In 2020, the Frida was closed indefinitely in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, the theater organization operated a drive-in theater in Tustin. In April 2021, the theater re-opened with tentative facemask and capacity restrictions. In January 2022, the Frida postponed its events amidst the spread of the Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus. On February 21, 2023, the Frida Cinema celebrated its ninth anniversary with a screening of the 1998 Coen brothers comedy The Big Lebowski and an associated themed party. Moviegoers wore costumes of characters from the film and were served White Russian cocktails, a drink popularized by the movie. On March 17, 2023, the Frida hosted a Jesus Christ Superstar screening and cast reunion for the film's 50th anniversary.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Frida Cinema is a non-profit arthouse movie theater in Santa Ana, California. The theater, named after Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, is located in the 4th Street Market shopping district of the East End neighborhood in Downtown Santa Ana. The Frida has two screens and is the only non-profit theater in Orange County, California. The theater screens vintage blockbusters, cult classics, and independent films.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "From 1985 until the end of 2013, the Fiesta Twin Theatre was operated as a mainstream theater screening blockbusters with Spanish-language subtitles. In February 2013, the facility was leased by Logan Crow, a cinema proprietor with previous arthouse operations in Long Beach. The Fiesta Twin Theatre remained in operation for a year under Crow's lease until it was reopened as the Frida Cinema on February 21, 2014. It opened with the 2014 edition of the South East European Film Festival. The first public screening at the Frida was a showing of Tango Abrazos, a Slovenian romantic comedy.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 2020, the Frida was closed indefinitely in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, the theater organization operated a drive-in theater in Tustin. In April 2021, the theater re-opened with tentative facemask and capacity restrictions. In January 2022, the Frida postponed its events amidst the spread of the Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On February 21, 2023, the Frida Cinema celebrated its ninth anniversary with a screening of the 1998 Coen brothers comedy The Big Lebowski and an associated themed party. Moviegoers wore costumes of characters from the film and were served White Russian cocktails, a drink popularized by the movie. On March 17, 2023, the Frida hosted a Jesus Christ Superstar screening and cast reunion for the film's 50th anniversary.", "title": "History" } ]
The Frida Cinema is a non-profit arthouse movie theater in Santa Ana, California. The theater, named after Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, is located in the 4th Street Market shopping district of the East End neighborhood in Downtown Santa Ana. The Frida has two screens and is the only non-profit theater in Orange County, California. The theater screens vintage blockbusters, cult classics, and independent films.
2023-12-06T23:19:14Z
2023-12-22T20:17:22Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frida_Cinema
75,503,425
Isaiah of Onogošt
Saint Isaiah of Onogošt (Serbian Cyrillic: Исаија от Оногошта), also called Isaiah of Ostrog (Serbian Cyrillic: Исаија Острошки), was a Serbian Orthodox monk and ascetic who lived in a cave at the sight of the future Ostrog monastery between the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Today, very little is known about the life of Saint Isaiah. It is preserved that he was born in the village of Popi, near Nikšić, and that he became a monk and retreated into the rocky highlands of Ostrog, likely fleeing Ottoman occupation. Once there, he built a small church which he dedicated to the entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the temple, where he would remain until his death. Soon after, the Turks burned his relics at Planinica between Ostrog and Nikšić in an attempt to suppress the veneration of him as a saint. Basil of Ostrog would later choose the sight of Saint Isaiah's hermitage to build the Ostrog Monastery, where Isaiah's grandson would become a hieromonk, taking his grandfather's name. On an inscription at the church of the Holy Cross at Ostrog, Saint Isaiah is mentioned as the "Holy and Venerable Father of ours Isaiah of the village of Popi''. The first service dedicated to Saint Isaiah was held on 11 May 2015 during the consecration of a small chapel dedicated to him at the Upper Ostrog monastery, where regular services to him have been held every year since.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Saint Isaiah of Onogošt (Serbian Cyrillic: Исаија от Оногошта), also called Isaiah of Ostrog (Serbian Cyrillic: Исаија Острошки), was a Serbian Orthodox monk and ascetic who lived in a cave at the sight of the future Ostrog monastery between the late 16th and early 17th centuries.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Today, very little is known about the life of Saint Isaiah. It is preserved that he was born in the village of Popi, near Nikšić, and that he became a monk and retreated into the rocky highlands of Ostrog, likely fleeing Ottoman occupation. Once there, he built a small church which he dedicated to the entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the temple, where he would remain until his death. Soon after, the Turks burned his relics at Planinica between Ostrog and Nikšić in an attempt to suppress the veneration of him as a saint.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Basil of Ostrog would later choose the sight of Saint Isaiah's hermitage to build the Ostrog Monastery, where Isaiah's grandson would become a hieromonk, taking his grandfather's name. On an inscription at the church of the Holy Cross at Ostrog, Saint Isaiah is mentioned as the \"Holy and Venerable Father of ours Isaiah of the village of Popi''.", "title": "Legacy" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The first service dedicated to Saint Isaiah was held on 11 May 2015 during the consecration of a small chapel dedicated to him at the Upper Ostrog monastery, where regular services to him have been held every year since.", "title": "Legacy" } ]
Saint Isaiah of Onogošt, also called Isaiah of Ostrog, was a Serbian Orthodox monk and ascetic who lived in a cave at the sight of the future Ostrog monastery between the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
2023-12-06T23:20:35Z
2023-12-31T23:38:42Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Short description", "Template:Orphan", "Template:Infobox saint" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaiah_of_Onogo%C5%A1t
75,503,485
Making Babies (2023 film)
Making Babies (French: Faire un enfant) is a Canadian short comedy-drama film, directed by Éric K. Boulianne and released in 2023. The film stars Boulianne and Florence Blain Mbaye as a couple who aspire to have their first child together but are facing fertility difficulties. The cast also includes Rémi St-Michel as the doctor, as well as Jérémie Desbiens and Andrée-Anne Lacasse in small roles as another couple. The film premiered on August 6, 2023, at the 76th Locarno Film Festival, and had its Canadian premiere on September 8 at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023. At Locarno, Boulianne won the Pardi di domani award for best direction in a short film.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Making Babies (French: Faire un enfant) is a Canadian short comedy-drama film, directed by Éric K. Boulianne and released in 2023. The film stars Boulianne and Florence Blain Mbaye as a couple who aspire to have their first child together but are facing fertility difficulties.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The cast also includes Rémi St-Michel as the doctor, as well as Jérémie Desbiens and Andrée-Anne Lacasse in small roles as another couple.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The film premiered on August 6, 2023, at the 76th Locarno Film Festival, and had its Canadian premiere on September 8 at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival.", "title": "Distribution" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.", "title": "Response" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "At Locarno, Boulianne won the Pardi di domani award for best direction in a short film.", "title": "Awards" } ]
Making Babies is a Canadian short comedy-drama film, directed by Éric K. Boulianne and released in 2023. The film stars Boulianne and Florence Blain Mbaye as a couple who aspire to have their first child together but are facing fertility difficulties. The cast also includes Rémi St-Michel as the doctor, as well as Jérémie Desbiens and Andrée-Anne Lacasse in small roles as another couple.
2023-12-06T23:25:21Z
2023-12-07T06:01:37Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Making_Babies_(2023_film)
75,503,486
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing is a memoir by the Canadian-American actor Matthew Perry. It was released by Macmillan Publishers (and by Headline in the UK) on 1 November 2022, a year before Perry's death on 28 October 2023. In the book, Perry details his decades-long struggle with alcoholism and addiction. Perry also details his personal life, including his relationships and time on the Friends TV series, in which he starred as Chandler Bing. The book was made available in digital, paperback, and hardcover formats, with Perry himself narrating the audiobook edition. Shortly after its release, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing became a bestseller on both Amazon and The New York Times charts. It received generally positive reviews from critics, with many praising Perry's openness, but some criticizing the book for being "lackluster" and inconsistent.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing is a memoir by the Canadian-American actor Matthew Perry. It was released by Macmillan Publishers (and by Headline in the UK) on 1 November 2022, a year before Perry's death on 28 October 2023. In the book, Perry details his decades-long struggle with alcoholism and addiction. Perry also details his personal life, including his relationships and time on the Friends TV series, in which he starred as Chandler Bing. The book was made available in digital, paperback, and hardcover formats, with Perry himself narrating the audiobook edition.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Shortly after its release, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing became a bestseller on both Amazon and The New York Times charts. It received generally positive reviews from critics, with many praising Perry's openness, but some criticizing the book for being \"lackluster\" and inconsistent.", "title": "" } ]
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing is a memoir by the Canadian-American actor Matthew Perry. It was released by Macmillan Publishers on 1 November 2022, a year before Perry's death on 28 October 2023. In the book, Perry details his decades-long struggle with alcoholism and addiction. Perry also details his personal life, including his relationships and time on the Friends TV series, in which he starred as Chandler Bing. The book was made available in digital, paperback, and hardcover formats, with Perry himself narrating the audiobook edition. Shortly after its release, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing became a bestseller on both Amazon and The New York Times charts. It received generally positive reviews from critics, with many praising Perry's openness, but some criticizing the book for being "lackluster" and inconsistent.
2023-12-06T23:25:23Z
2023-12-07T23:20:49Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends,_Lovers,_and_the_Big_Terrible_Thing
75,503,492
Palisota bracteosa
Palisota bracteosa is a species of plant in the family Commelinaceae. It is native to western Africa, specifically Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Gulf of Guinea islands, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Togo. P. bracteosa is an herbaceous plant with leaves arranged in a rosette. It lacks a stem. The flowers are pinkish-white or white and the fruits are red. Palisota bracteosa is used for many different medicinal purposes. Both the hairs and sap of the fruit are irritants. Palisota bracteosa has been introduced to Trinidad and Tobago, and is naturalized or naturalizing in Hawaii.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Palisota bracteosa is a species of plant in the family Commelinaceae. It is native to western Africa, specifically Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Gulf of Guinea islands, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Togo.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "P. bracteosa is an herbaceous plant with leaves arranged in a rosette. It lacks a stem. The flowers are pinkish-white or white and the fruits are red.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Palisota bracteosa is used for many different medicinal purposes. Both the hairs and sap of the fruit are irritants.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Palisota bracteosa has been introduced to Trinidad and Tobago, and is naturalized or naturalizing in Hawaii.", "title": "" } ]
Palisota bracteosa is a species of plant in the family Commelinaceae. It is native to western Africa, specifically Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Gulf of Guinea islands, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Togo. P. bracteosa is an herbaceous plant with leaves arranged in a rosette. It lacks a stem. The flowers are pinkish-white or white and the fruits are red. Palisota bracteosa is used for many different medicinal purposes. Both the hairs and sap of the fruit are irritants. Palisota bracteosa has been introduced to Trinidad and Tobago, and is naturalized or naturalizing in Hawaii.
2023-12-06T23:25:51Z
2023-12-15T01:01:05Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Speciesbox", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Taxonbar" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palisota_bracteosa
75,503,505
Naturalization Act 1714
The Naturalization Act of 1714 (1 Geo. 1. St. 2. c. 4), printed under the full title An Act for the further limitation of the crown, and better securing the rights and liberties of the subject, was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain. The act was passed in 1714, as part of the first session under the new reign of King George I of Great Britain, at the outset of the Hanoverian dynasty. According to historians of British nationality and citizenship, this "Act of 1714 prescribed that no Bill of naturalisation should be received in either House unless it included a clause embodying the disabilities of the Act of Settlement." (In this case, "disabilities" refers to the legal sense of disqualification or disallowal.) That is, the Act of 1714 continued a string of laws dating back to William and Mary, all related to the barring of Catholics from taking the throne in England or Ireland, holding public office, and other rights and privileges of British subjects. These laws would slowly be repealed or replaced with the Catholic emancipation laws of the 1760s and onward, the Aliens Act of 1844, and related legislation from British nationality and citizenship history. The text of the Act has two primary parts. Part 1 extended the Act of Settlement by stipulating that "no person born out of the kingdoms of England, Scotland, or Ireland, or the dominions thereunto belonging, although he be naturalized or made a denizen, except such as are born of English parents, should be capable to be of the privy council, or a member of either house of parliament, or to enjoy any office or place of trust, either civil or military, or to have any grant of lands, tenements, or hereditaments from the crown, to himself or to any others in trust for him." Part 2 then amended the earlier law by adding that this interdiction should also apply to "any person hereafter... naturalized" and that — most importantly — "no bill of naturalization shall hereafter be received in either house of parliament, unless such clause or words be first inserted or contained therein." This Act was largely repealed by the Aliens Act of 1844. Dummett and Nicol point out that "[w]hen in 1840 Parliament wanted to grant full rights to Prince Albert, it first had to pass a Bill amending the Act of 1714." Moreover, as another scholar notes, "section 6 of the 1844 [Aliens Act] still prohibited naturalized subjects from becoming members of the Privy Council or of either House of Parliament and made them subject to such further restrictions as might be imposed by the certificate of naturalization. Once imposed, restrictions could only by removed by grant." Thus, "in the same period in the early nineteenth century when religious barriers to naturalisation began to be removed, new limitations on undesired political views, and persons not of good character, were coming into use."
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Naturalization Act of 1714 (1 Geo. 1. St. 2. c. 4), printed under the full title An Act for the further limitation of the crown, and better securing the rights and liberties of the subject, was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain. The act was passed in 1714, as part of the first session under the new reign of King George I of Great Britain, at the outset of the Hanoverian dynasty. According to historians of British nationality and citizenship, this \"Act of 1714 prescribed that no Bill of naturalisation should be received in either House unless it included a clause embodying the disabilities of the Act of Settlement.\" (In this case, \"disabilities\" refers to the legal sense of disqualification or disallowal.)", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "That is, the Act of 1714 continued a string of laws dating back to William and Mary, all related to the barring of Catholics from taking the throne in England or Ireland, holding public office, and other rights and privileges of British subjects. These laws would slowly be repealed or replaced with the Catholic emancipation laws of the 1760s and onward, the Aliens Act of 1844, and related legislation from British nationality and citizenship history.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The text of the Act has two primary parts. Part 1 extended the Act of Settlement by stipulating that \"no person born out of the kingdoms of England, Scotland, or Ireland, or the dominions thereunto belonging, although he be naturalized or made a denizen, except such as are born of English parents, should be capable to be of the privy council, or a member of either house of parliament, or to enjoy any office or place of trust, either civil or military, or to have any grant of lands, tenements, or hereditaments from the crown, to himself or to any others in trust for him.\" Part 2 then amended the earlier law by adding that this interdiction should also apply to \"any person hereafter... naturalized\" and that — most importantly — \"no bill of naturalization shall hereafter be received in either house of parliament, unless such clause or words be first inserted or contained therein.\"", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "This Act was largely repealed by the Aliens Act of 1844. Dummett and Nicol point out that \"[w]hen in 1840 Parliament wanted to grant full rights to Prince Albert, it first had to pass a Bill amending the Act of 1714.\" Moreover, as another scholar notes, \"section 6 of the 1844 [Aliens Act] still prohibited naturalized subjects from becoming members of the Privy Council or of either House of Parliament and made them subject to such further restrictions as might be imposed by the certificate of naturalization. Once imposed, restrictions could only by removed by grant.\" Thus, \"in the same period in the early nineteenth century when religious barriers to naturalisation began to be removed, new limitations on undesired political views, and persons not of good character, were coming into use.\"", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
The Naturalization Act of 1714, printed under the full title An Act for the further limitation of the crown, and better securing the rights and liberties of the subject, was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain. The act was passed in 1714, as part of the first session under the new reign of King George I of Great Britain, at the outset of the Hanoverian dynasty. According to historians of British nationality and citizenship, this "Act of 1714 prescribed that no Bill of naturalisation should be received in either House unless it included a clause embodying the disabilities of the Act of Settlement." That is, the Act of 1714 continued a string of laws dating back to William and Mary, all related to the barring of Catholics from taking the throne in England or Ireland, holding public office, and other rights and privileges of British subjects. These laws would slowly be repealed or replaced with the Catholic emancipation laws of the 1760s and onward, the Aliens Act of 1844, and related legislation from British nationality and citizenship history. The text of the Act has two primary parts. Part 1 extended the Act of Settlement by stipulating that "no person born out of the kingdoms of England, Scotland, or Ireland, or the dominions thereunto belonging, although he be naturalized or made a denizen, except such as are born of English parents, should be capable to be of the privy council, or a member of either house of parliament, or to enjoy any office or place of trust, either civil or military, or to have any grant of lands, tenements, or hereditaments from the crown, to himself or to any others in trust for him." Part 2 then amended the earlier law by adding that this interdiction should also apply to "any person hereafter... naturalized" and that — most importantly — "no bill of naturalization shall hereafter be received in either house of parliament, unless such clause or words be first inserted or contained therein." This Act was largely repealed by the Aliens Act of 1844. Dummett and Nicol point out that "[w]hen in 1840 Parliament wanted to grant full rights to Prince Albert, it first had to pass a Bill amending the Act of 1714." Moreover, as another scholar notes, "section 6 of the 1844 [Aliens Act] still prohibited naturalized subjects from becoming members of the Privy Council or of either House of Parliament and made them subject to such further restrictions as might be imposed by the certificate of naturalization. Once imposed, restrictions could only by removed by grant." Thus, "in the same period in the early nineteenth century when religious barriers to naturalisation began to be removed, new limitations on undesired political views, and persons not of good character, were coming into use."
2023-12-06T23:26:44Z
2023-12-08T11:41:27Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalization_Act_1714
75,503,515
Sofiivka, Sofiivka rural hromada, Berdiansk Raion, Zaporizhzhia Oblast
Sofiivka (Ukrainian: Софіївка) is a village in Berdiansk Raion, Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Sofiivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. The village was founded in 1862 on the site of the former Togaly Nogai settlement by Bulgarians who had come from the Bessarabia region. Its original name was Romanivka (Ukrainian: Романівка). In 1926, its name was changed by the Soviet government to Kolarivka (Ukrainian: Коларівка) in honor of Bulgarian communist leader Vasil Kolarov. From 1925 to 1939, it was the center of Kolarivka Raion [uk] (known until 1926 as Romanivka Raion), one of the national raions [uk] of the Ukrainian SSR. During World War II, Kolarivka was occupied by Nazi Germany before being liberated by the Red Army in autumn 1943. In 2016, as part of decommunization in Ukraine, its name was changed to Bolharka (Ukrainian: Болгарка). On 12 June 2020, Bolharka became the center of Kolarivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine, in accordance with an edict of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine that was part of decentralization reforms. On October 7, 2021, its name was changed to the current one by another edict of the Verkhovna Rada.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Sofiivka (Ukrainian: Софіївка) is a village in Berdiansk Raion, Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Sofiivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The village was founded in 1862 on the site of the former Togaly Nogai settlement by Bulgarians who had come from the Bessarabia region. Its original name was Romanivka (Ukrainian: Романівка). In 1926, its name was changed by the Soviet government to Kolarivka (Ukrainian: Коларівка) in honor of Bulgarian communist leader Vasil Kolarov. From 1925 to 1939, it was the center of Kolarivka Raion [uk] (known until 1926 as Romanivka Raion), one of the national raions [uk] of the Ukrainian SSR.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "During World War II, Kolarivka was occupied by Nazi Germany before being liberated by the Red Army in autumn 1943.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 2016, as part of decommunization in Ukraine, its name was changed to Bolharka (Ukrainian: Болгарка). On 12 June 2020, Bolharka became the center of Kolarivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine, in accordance with an edict of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine that was part of decentralization reforms. On October 7, 2021, its name was changed to the current one by another edict of the Verkhovna Rada.", "title": "History" } ]
Sofiivka is a village in Berdiansk Raion, Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Sofiivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.
2023-12-06T23:26:56Z
2023-12-10T18:01:13Z
[ "Template:Cite web", "Template:Zaporizhzhia-geo-stub", "Template:Expand Ukrainian", "Template:Lang-uk", "Template:Ill", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sofiivka,_Sofiivka_rural_hromada,_Berdiansk_Raion,_Zaporizhzhia_Oblast
75,503,563
Nana Kwabena Kena II
Adontenhene Nana Kwabena Kena II was a Ghanaian diplomat and Chief of Kukurantumi. Kena hailed from Kyebi in the Eastern Region of Ghana. Kena was the Okyenhene (ruler) and Adontenhene of the Akyem Abuakwa State as a Regent from 13 June 1958 to 14 April 1959. He was the chairman for the National Food Board. Kena was a member of the Convention People's Party. Kena was the High Commissioner of Ghana to India from July 1959 to February 1962. Kena was married to Rose Korantemaa Okrah and Samuel Okae Foster was their son, also a former diplomat who served as High Commissioner of Ghana to the United Kingdom. Kena died on 28 August 1961 in New Delhi. He died at 48 years.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Adontenhene Nana Kwabena Kena II was a Ghanaian diplomat and Chief of Kukurantumi.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Kena hailed from Kyebi in the Eastern Region of Ghana.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Kena was the Okyenhene (ruler) and Adontenhene of the Akyem Abuakwa State as a Regent from 13 June 1958 to 14 April 1959.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "He was the chairman for the National Food Board.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Kena was a member of the Convention People's Party.", "title": "Politics" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Kena was the High Commissioner of Ghana to India from July 1959 to February 1962.", "title": "Ambassadorial role" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Kena was married to Rose Korantemaa Okrah and Samuel Okae Foster was their son, also a former diplomat who served as High Commissioner of Ghana to the United Kingdom.", "title": "Personal life" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Kena died on 28 August 1961 in New Delhi. He died at 48 years.", "title": "Death" } ]
Adontenhene Nana Kwabena Kena II was a Ghanaian diplomat and Chief of Kukurantumi.
2023-12-06T23:29:42Z
2023-12-26T16:10:41Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nana_Kwabena_Kena_II
75,503,592
Bolharka
Bolharka may refer to several places in Ukraine:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Bolharka may refer to several places in Ukraine:", "title": "" } ]
Bolharka may refer to several places in Ukraine: Bolharka, Pervomaisk Raion, Mykolaiv Oblast The former name of Sofiivka, Sofiivka rural hromada, Berdiansk Raion, Zaporizhzhia Oblast
2023-12-06T23:31:27Z
2023-12-06T23:33:52Z
[ "Template:Geodis" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolharka
75,503,607
Nesothele
Nesothele is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Verrucariaceae. It has five species. The genus was circumscribed by the British lichenologist Alan Orange in 2022, with Nesothele glebulosa assigned as the type species. This species, newly described along with the genus, is found in Nepal. Nesothele is closely related to the genus Staurothele, appearing as a sister group in molecular phylogenetics analysis. Nesothele is characterized by a thallus with a growth form that is crustose to squamulose. Nesothele contains algae in the hymenium, a unique aspect that contributes to its identification. Each ascus typically contains 4–8 colourless, muriform ascospores, helping to distinguish Nesothele from other related genera. As of December 2023, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts five species of Nesothele.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Nesothele is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Verrucariaceae. It has five species. The genus was circumscribed by the British lichenologist Alan Orange in 2022, with Nesothele glebulosa assigned as the type species. This species, newly described along with the genus, is found in Nepal.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Nesothele is closely related to the genus Staurothele, appearing as a sister group in molecular phylogenetics analysis. Nesothele is characterized by a thallus with a growth form that is crustose to squamulose. Nesothele contains algae in the hymenium, a unique aspect that contributes to its identification. Each ascus typically contains 4–8 colourless, muriform ascospores, helping to distinguish Nesothele from other related genera.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "As of December 2023, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts five species of Nesothele.", "title": "Species" } ]
Nesothele is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Verrucariaceae. It has five species. The genus was circumscribed by the British lichenologist Alan Orange in 2022, with Nesothele glebulosa assigned as the type species. This species, newly described along with the genus, is found in Nepal. Nesothele is closely related to the genus Staurothele, appearing as a sister group in molecular phylogenetics analysis. Nesothele is characterized by a thallus with a growth form that is crustose to squamulose. Nesothele contains algae in the hymenium, a unique aspect that contributes to its identification. Each ascus typically contains 4–8 colourless, muriform ascospores, helping to distinguish Nesothele from other related genera.
2023-12-06T23:34:01Z
2023-12-21T13:47:24Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nesothele
75,503,618
National Board of Review Awards 2023
The 95th National Board of Review Awards, honoring the best in film for 2023, were announced on December 6, 2023. Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon won Best Film and received the most wins with four, including Best Director and Best Actress. This year, the National Board of Review established a new category titled "Outstanding Achievement in Stunt Artistry", which was created "to celebrate the accomplishments and work of stunt artists". The annual awards gala will be held on January 11, 2024, at Cipriani 42nd Street in New York City, and will be hosted by television personality and journalist Willie Geist. Films listed alphabetically except top, which is ranked as Best Film of the Year: Killers of the Flower Moon Anatomy of a Fall (France) Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie Best Film: Best Director: Best Actor: Best Actress: Best Supporting Actor: Best Supporting Actress: Best Original Screenplay: Best Adapted Screenplay: Best Animated Feature: Breakthrough Performance: Best Directorial Debut: Best International Film: Best Documentary: Best Ensemble: Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography: Outstanding Achievement in Stunt Artistry: NBR Icon Award: NBR Freedom of Expression:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 95th National Board of Review Awards, honoring the best in film for 2023, were announced on December 6, 2023. Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon won Best Film and received the most wins with four, including Best Director and Best Actress.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "This year, the National Board of Review established a new category titled \"Outstanding Achievement in Stunt Artistry\", which was created \"to celebrate the accomplishments and work of stunt artists\".", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The annual awards gala will be held on January 11, 2024, at Cipriani 42nd Street in New York City, and will be hosted by television personality and journalist Willie Geist.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Films listed alphabetically except top, which is ranked as Best Film of the Year:", "title": "Top 10 Films" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Killers of the Flower Moon", "title": "Top 10 Films" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Anatomy of a Fall (France)", "title": "Top 5 International Films" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie", "title": "Top 5 Documentaries" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Best Film:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Best Director:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "Best Actor:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "Best Actress:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "Best Supporting Actor:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "Best Supporting Actress:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 13, "text": "Best Original Screenplay:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 14, "text": "Best Adapted Screenplay:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 15, "text": "Best Animated Feature:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 16, "text": "Breakthrough Performance:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 17, "text": "Best Directorial Debut:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 18, "text": "Best International Film:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 19, "text": "Best Documentary:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 20, "text": "Best Ensemble:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 21, "text": "Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 22, "text": "Outstanding Achievement in Stunt Artistry:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 23, "text": "NBR Icon Award:", "title": "Winners" }, { "paragraph_id": 24, "text": "NBR Freedom of Expression:", "title": "Winners" } ]
The 95th National Board of Review Awards, honoring the best in film for 2023, were announced on December 6, 2023. Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon won Best Film and received the most wins with four, including Best Director and Best Actress. This year, the National Board of Review established a new category titled "Outstanding Achievement in Stunt Artistry", which was created "to celebrate the accomplishments and work of stunt artists". The annual awards gala will be held on January 11, 2024, at Cipriani 42nd Street in New York City, and will be hosted by television personality and journalist Willie Geist.
2023-12-06T23:37:24Z
2023-12-22T10:01:00Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox film award", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Official website", "Template:NBR Awards Chron" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Board_of_Review_Awards_2023
75,503,628
Kind Stepmother
Kind Stepmother (Hungarian: Édes mostoha) is a 1935 Hungarian drama film directed by Béla Balogh and starring Maria von Tasnady, Antal Páger and Gerö Mály. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director István Szirontai Lhotka. A widowed baron is told that it will be good for his young daughter if he remarries but when he brings his former sweetheart Mária to the house and introduces her as his wife, Erzsike is terrified due to what she has been told about wicked stepmothers.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kind Stepmother (Hungarian: Édes mostoha) is a 1935 Hungarian drama film directed by Béla Balogh and starring Maria von Tasnady, Antal Páger and Gerö Mály. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director István Szirontai Lhotka.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "A widowed baron is told that it will be good for his young daughter if he remarries but when he brings his former sweetheart Mária to the house and introduces her as his wife, Erzsike is terrified due to what she has been told about wicked stepmothers.", "title": "Synopsis" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
Kind Stepmother is a 1935 Hungarian drama film directed by Béla Balogh and starring Maria von Tasnady, Antal Páger and Gerö Mály. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director István Szirontai Lhotka.
2023-12-06T23:38:32Z
2023-12-20T20:44:14Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox film", "Template:Reflist", "Template:IMDb title", "Template:Béla Balogh", "Template:Hungary-film-stub" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kind_Stepmother
75,503,642
27–29 Fountain Alley
27–29 Fountain Alley is a historic commercial building located in San Jose, California. The building is architecturally significant as the only representative of late Victorian-style in this area. Its historically important for its association with Fountain Alley, one of San Jose oldest streets. The Fountain Alley building at 27–29 Fountain Alley was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1982. The building at 27–29 Fountain Alley is a three-story brick commercial structure, located between First and Second Streets in Downtown San Jose. It occupies a lot measuring 23.5 ft (7.2 m) by 57.15 ft (17.42 m). Its façade has a pair of two-story bay windows that extend over the first story. Cornices at the roof level and between the bays add definition to its floor and roofline. During a period of the city's expansion, R. H. Quincy erected the brick Fountain Alley building in 1889. J.O. McKee was the architect. Originally a one block lane, Fountain Alley was first known as Archer Street, named for attorney Lawrence Archer who lived at the Second Street end. In 1854 William Campbell drilled an artesian well at First and Santa Clara Streets which flooded the area as far west as Market Street. To relieve the overflow, a ditch was dug down the alley to drain off the water. On May 14, 1855, Frank Lightston, a pioneer among San Jose's Yankee settlers, officially transferred ownership of the alley to the city. A year following, City Alderman Moody suggested renaming it "Fountain" to mirror its association with the nearby well. Despite its official designation as "Fountain Street," the term "alley" gained popularity among San Jose residents, leading local maps, and signposts to adopt the name "Fountain Alley" by the 1330s. By 1861, this thoroughfare became an early beneficiary of gas street lamps in San Jose. Fountain Alley has hosted commercial structures since the 1870s. The most prominent among these was an extension of the L-shaped McLaughlin and Ryland Building, positioned at the southeast corner of First and Santa Clara Streets. Between 1884 and 1889, alterations were made to the eastern section of the McLaughlin and Ryland Building. Over time, the building has hosted a range of commercial ventures, one of which being J.L. Chargin restaurant that occupied the building between 1905-1935. Since 1935, the ground floor has accommodated various service-oriented businesses, including a tavern, a liquor store, and most recently, a beauty shop. Initially, the second and third floors served as lodgings and boarding rooms. However, since 1950, the upper floors have remained unoccupied. Between 1965 and 1969, the ground floor commercial space remained unoccupied. By 1969, the latest utilization of the ground floor was as a beauty salon. In 1998, the city approved $100 million downtown revitalization project to attract more shops and restaurants to Fountain Alley district on First and Second streets between Santa Clara and San Fernando streets. Today Fountain Alley Building at 27-29 Fountain Alley is part of the city's proposed mixed-use San Jose Fountain Alley project. 27–29 Fountain Alley was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1982. The Fountain Alley building holds historical significance in architecture because it is the only representative of Italianate design and late Victorian-style in this area. Its historically important for its association with Fountain Alley, one of San Jose oldest streets.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "27–29 Fountain Alley is a historic commercial building located in San Jose, California. The building is architecturally significant as the only representative of late Victorian-style in this area. Its historically important for its association with Fountain Alley, one of San Jose oldest streets. The Fountain Alley building at 27–29 Fountain Alley was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1982.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The building at 27–29 Fountain Alley is a three-story brick commercial structure, located between First and Second Streets in Downtown San Jose. It occupies a lot measuring 23.5 ft (7.2 m) by 57.15 ft (17.42 m). Its façade has a pair of two-story bay windows that extend over the first story. Cornices at the roof level and between the bays add definition to its floor and roofline. During a period of the city's expansion, R. H. Quincy erected the brick Fountain Alley building in 1889. J.O. McKee was the architect.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Originally a one block lane, Fountain Alley was first known as Archer Street, named for attorney Lawrence Archer who lived at the Second Street end. In 1854 William Campbell drilled an artesian well at First and Santa Clara Streets which flooded the area as far west as Market Street. To relieve the overflow, a ditch was dug down the alley to drain off the water.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On May 14, 1855, Frank Lightston, a pioneer among San Jose's Yankee settlers, officially transferred ownership of the alley to the city. A year following, City Alderman Moody suggested renaming it \"Fountain\" to mirror its association with the nearby well. Despite its official designation as \"Fountain Street,\" the term \"alley\" gained popularity among San Jose residents, leading local maps, and signposts to adopt the name \"Fountain Alley\" by the 1330s. By 1861, this thoroughfare became an early beneficiary of gas street lamps in San Jose.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Fountain Alley has hosted commercial structures since the 1870s. The most prominent among these was an extension of the L-shaped McLaughlin and Ryland Building, positioned at the southeast corner of First and Santa Clara Streets. Between 1884 and 1889, alterations were made to the eastern section of the McLaughlin and Ryland Building.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Over time, the building has hosted a range of commercial ventures, one of which being J.L. Chargin restaurant that occupied the building between 1905-1935. Since 1935, the ground floor has accommodated various service-oriented businesses, including a tavern, a liquor store, and most recently, a beauty shop. Initially, the second and third floors served as lodgings and boarding rooms. However, since 1950, the upper floors have remained unoccupied. Between 1965 and 1969, the ground floor commercial space remained unoccupied. By 1969, the latest utilization of the ground floor was as a beauty salon.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 1998, the city approved $100 million downtown revitalization project to attract more shops and restaurants to Fountain Alley district on First and Second streets between Santa Clara and San Fernando streets. Today Fountain Alley Building at 27-29 Fountain Alley is part of the city's proposed mixed-use San Jose Fountain Alley project.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "27–29 Fountain Alley was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1982. The Fountain Alley building holds historical significance in architecture because it is the only representative of Italianate design and late Victorian-style in this area. Its historically important for its association with Fountain Alley, one of San Jose oldest streets.", "title": "Historical significance" } ]
27–29 Fountain Alley is a historic commercial building located in San Jose, California. The building is architecturally significant as the only representative of late Victorian-style in this area. Its historically important for its association with Fountain Alley, one of San Jose oldest streets. The Fountain Alley building at 27–29 Fountain Alley was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 2, 1982.
2023-12-06T23:41:19Z
2023-12-29T22:56:03Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27%E2%80%9329_Fountain_Alley
75,503,649
G7512 Guiyang–Chengdu Expressway
The G7512 Guiyang–Chengdu Expressway (Chinese: 贵阳—成都高速公路), also referred to as the Zhurong Expressway (Chinese: 筑蓉高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Guiyang, Guizhou and Chengdu, Sichuan. The expressway begins in Baiyun District, Guiyang, passing through Xiuwen, Jinsha, Gulin, Xuyong, Xingwen, Gong, Yibin, Rong, Jianyang, and ends in Jinjiang District, Chengdu.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The G7512 Guiyang–Chengdu Expressway (Chinese: 贵阳—成都高速公路), also referred to as the Zhurong Expressway (Chinese: 筑蓉高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Guiyang, Guizhou and Chengdu, Sichuan.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The expressway begins in Baiyun District, Guiyang, passing through Xiuwen, Jinsha, Gulin, Xuyong, Xingwen, Gong, Yibin, Rong, Jianyang, and ends in Jinjiang District, Chengdu.", "title": "Route" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
The G7512 Guiyang–Chengdu Expressway, also referred to as the Zhurong Expressway, is an expressway in China that connects the cities of Guiyang, Guizhou and Chengdu, Sichuan.
2023-12-06T23:44:55Z
2023-12-12T12:36:30Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G7512_Guiyang%E2%80%93Chengdu_Expressway
75,503,653
Jennifer Saint
Jennifer Saint is a British novelist. In the Chicago Review of Books, Elektra has "brought fascinating women from Greek myth to life". In Paste, her novel Atalanta was described as "feels like such a breath of fresh air". Official website
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Jennifer Saint is a British novelist.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In the Chicago Review of Books, Elektra has \"brought fascinating women from Greek myth to life\". In Paste, her novel Atalanta was described as \"feels like such a breath of fresh air\".", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Official website", "title": "External links" } ]
Jennifer Saint is a British novelist. In the Chicago Review of Books, Elektra has "brought fascinating women from Greek myth to life". In Paste, her novel Atalanta was described as "feels like such a breath of fresh air".
2023-12-06T23:46:22Z
2023-12-19T13:38:13Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Saint
75,503,655
Elmano de Freitas
Elmano de Freitas da Costa (born 12 April 1970) is a Brazilian lawyer and politician. Affiliated with the Workers' Party (PT), he has been the governor of the state of Ceará since 2023. Having graduated with a law degree from the Federal University of Ceará, he started his legal career and political inclinations working with labor unions and social movements. He started his political career in 1996, when he was a candidate for the city council of his hometown of Baturité, but was not elected. Between 2011 and 2012, he was the Municipal Secretary of Education of Fortaleza during the mayoralty of Luizianne Lins. He later would run for the state legislature in 2014 and 2018, and later would run for governor in 2022. Freitas was born on 12 April 1970 in Baturité, one of five children of teacher Elma de Freitas da Costa and farmer Francisco Feitosa da Costa. Elmano began his activism in Baturité, where he became part of the local basic ecclesial community with the Catholic church, teaching reading to children who did not attend school. At 15, he moved with his brothers to Fortaleza to study, with him graduated from the law school of the Federal University of Ceará. There, he became involved with the student activists' movement and the Student's Central Directory. During his time in advocacy, he went on to provide legal and political defense for labor unions and social movements such as the Landless Workers' Movement, as well as coordinating the National Network of Lawyers and Peoples' Lawyers between 2001 and 2009. A member of the Workers' Party since 1989, he had been the leader of the state's directory at one point for 8 years. Freitas first participated in an election in 1996, when his name was put on a list of candidates for Baturité's city council, but did not campaign because he helped Lins, also from the PT, in her candidacy for a vacant seat on Fortaleza's Municipal Council. She had ultimately won the election. He ended up being the least voted on the party line in Baturité's elections, having only received 4 votes. In 2008, he coordinated Lins' reelection campaign for mayor, and in the following year, during her second mandate, he led the Peoples' Participation commission in her cabinet, afterwards becoming, between 2011 and 2012, the municipal Secretary of Education. In 2012, Freitas became a candidate for the mayoralty of Fortaleza under the To Care For People coalition, with doctor Antônio Mourão of the Liberal Party (PL) as his vice-mayoral candidate and Lins supporting his campaign to succeed her. He came in first during the first round with 318,262 votes, or 25.44% of votes, and winning 51 neighborhoods. He faced Roberto Cláudio of the PSB, losing to him with 650,607 votes (53.02%) for Cláudio and 576,435 (46.98%) for Freitas. In 2013, Freitas was elected president of Fortaleza's PT branch with 60.84% of the vote, being in the position until 2017. In 2014, he became a candidate for state deputy and was elected with 44,292 votes in 2014, winning reelection in 2018 with 68,594. During his time in the Legislative Assembly of Ceará, Freitas had proposed and passed more than 30 laws, led the PT's faction in the assembly, presided over the Social Defense commission and the High Studies and Strategic Subjects council. He was the reporter for the CPI that investigated the involvement of military police associations during a riot in Ceará in 2020. In 2019, he received the Clóvis Beviláqua Medal of Judiciary Merit, the highest honor of the State Commons' Court of the State of Ceará for his contributions towards the state judiciary during his time as state deputy. Along with his time on the commission, he headed the Superior School of the Parlament of Ceará in 2017. In 2016, Freitas was the vice-mayoral candidate with Luizianne Lins for the mayoralty of Fortaleza for the PT, receiving 193,687 (15.06%) and ending in 3rd place. In 2020, he ran for mayor in the city of Caucaia with businesswoman Natécia Campos of the Progressistas in the Caucaia with the Courage to Change coalition, obtaining 13,018 votes (7.69%), ending in 4th place. In 2022, he became a candidate to become governor of Ceará for the Ceará Stronger Each Time coalition, with Jade Romero [pt] of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB). Freitas was chosen by the PT during a conflict between the state alliance with the Democratic Labour Party (PDT), which preferred their candidate, then-governor and former vice-governor Izolda Cela who came to office after governor Camilo Santana (PT) became a candidate for senator that year, to the detriment to party colleague Roberto Cláudio to succeed in state government. Associating himself with the suppert of both Santana and Cela, Freitas won the election with 2,808,300 votes, or 54.02% of the vote, removing the need for a second round. He received the majority of votes in 178 cities in Ceará, while his adversaries in the election Capitão Wagner and Roberto Cláudio, whom won in 5 cities and 1 city, respectively.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Elmano de Freitas da Costa (born 12 April 1970) is a Brazilian lawyer and politician. Affiliated with the Workers' Party (PT), he has been the governor of the state of Ceará since 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Having graduated with a law degree from the Federal University of Ceará, he started his legal career and political inclinations working with labor unions and social movements. He started his political career in 1996, when he was a candidate for the city council of his hometown of Baturité, but was not elected. Between 2011 and 2012, he was the Municipal Secretary of Education of Fortaleza during the mayoralty of Luizianne Lins. He later would run for the state legislature in 2014 and 2018, and later would run for governor in 2022.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Freitas was born on 12 April 1970 in Baturité, one of five children of teacher Elma de Freitas da Costa and farmer Francisco Feitosa da Costa. Elmano began his activism in Baturité, where he became part of the local basic ecclesial community with the Catholic church, teaching reading to children who did not attend school. At 15, he moved with his brothers to Fortaleza to study, with him graduated from the law school of the Federal University of Ceará. There, he became involved with the student activists' movement and the Student's Central Directory. During his time in advocacy, he went on to provide legal and political defense for labor unions and social movements such as the Landless Workers' Movement, as well as coordinating the National Network of Lawyers and Peoples' Lawyers between 2001 and 2009.", "title": "Early life and work" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "A member of the Workers' Party since 1989, he had been the leader of the state's directory at one point for 8 years. Freitas first participated in an election in 1996, when his name was put on a list of candidates for Baturité's city council, but did not campaign because he helped Lins, also from the PT, in her candidacy for a vacant seat on Fortaleza's Municipal Council. She had ultimately won the election. He ended up being the least voted on the party line in Baturité's elections, having only received 4 votes.", "title": "Political career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 2008, he coordinated Lins' reelection campaign for mayor, and in the following year, during her second mandate, he led the Peoples' Participation commission in her cabinet, afterwards becoming, between 2011 and 2012, the municipal Secretary of Education.", "title": "Political career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2012, Freitas became a candidate for the mayoralty of Fortaleza under the To Care For People coalition, with doctor Antônio Mourão of the Liberal Party (PL) as his vice-mayoral candidate and Lins supporting his campaign to succeed her. He came in first during the first round with 318,262 votes, or 25.44% of votes, and winning 51 neighborhoods. He faced Roberto Cláudio of the PSB, losing to him with 650,607 votes (53.02%) for Cláudio and 576,435 (46.98%) for Freitas. In 2013, Freitas was elected president of Fortaleza's PT branch with 60.84% of the vote, being in the position until 2017.", "title": "Political career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 2014, he became a candidate for state deputy and was elected with 44,292 votes in 2014, winning reelection in 2018 with 68,594. During his time in the Legislative Assembly of Ceará, Freitas had proposed and passed more than 30 laws, led the PT's faction in the assembly, presided over the Social Defense commission and the High Studies and Strategic Subjects council. He was the reporter for the CPI that investigated the involvement of military police associations during a riot in Ceará in 2020. In 2019, he received the Clóvis Beviláqua Medal of Judiciary Merit, the highest honor of the State Commons' Court of the State of Ceará for his contributions towards the state judiciary during his time as state deputy. Along with his time on the commission, he headed the Superior School of the Parlament of Ceará in 2017.", "title": "Political career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In 2016, Freitas was the vice-mayoral candidate with Luizianne Lins for the mayoralty of Fortaleza for the PT, receiving 193,687 (15.06%) and ending in 3rd place. In 2020, he ran for mayor in the city of Caucaia with businesswoman Natécia Campos of the Progressistas in the Caucaia with the Courage to Change coalition, obtaining 13,018 votes (7.69%), ending in 4th place.", "title": "Political career" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "In 2022, he became a candidate to become governor of Ceará for the Ceará Stronger Each Time coalition, with Jade Romero [pt] of the Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB). Freitas was chosen by the PT during a conflict between the state alliance with the Democratic Labour Party (PDT), which preferred their candidate, then-governor and former vice-governor Izolda Cela who came to office after governor Camilo Santana (PT) became a candidate for senator that year, to the detriment to party colleague Roberto Cláudio to succeed in state government. Associating himself with the suppert of both Santana and Cela, Freitas won the election with 2,808,300 votes, or 54.02% of the vote, removing the need for a second round. He received the majority of votes in 178 cities in Ceará, while his adversaries in the election Capitão Wagner and Roberto Cláudio, whom won in 5 cities and 1 city, respectively.", "title": "Political career" } ]
Elmano de Freitas da Costa is a Brazilian lawyer and politician. Affiliated with the Workers' Party (PT), he has been the governor of the state of Ceará since 2023. Having graduated with a law degree from the Federal University of Ceará, he started his legal career and political inclinations working with labor unions and social movements. He started his political career in 1996, when he was a candidate for the city council of his hometown of Baturité, but was not elected. Between 2011 and 2012, he was the Municipal Secretary of Education of Fortaleza during the mayoralty of Luizianne Lins. He later would run for the state legislature in 2014 and 2018, and later would run for governor in 2022.
2023-12-06T23:47:08Z
2023-12-20T04:47:38Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elmano_de_Freitas
75,503,687
Nenagh Arts Centre
Nenagh Arts Centre (Irish: Ionad Ealaíon Aonach Urmhumhan), formerly known as Nenagh Town Hall (Irish: Halla an Bhaile Aonach Urmhumhan), is a municipal building in Banba Square, Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. The building, which was used as the local town hall, now accommodates an arts centre. In 1884, the town commissioners for Nenagh resolved to erect a town hall and made an application for a loan from the Board of Works. The site they selected, on the east side of Banba Square facing Nenagh Courthouse, had been occupied by the local turf market. The new building was designed by the town surveyor, Robert Paul Gill, (father of Tomás Mac Giolla), in the Italianate style, built by Michael Grace in rubble masonry at a cost of £2,000 and was completed in 1889. The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage of three bays facing south onto Peter Street (later renamed Kickham Street). The left hand-bay featured a round headed doorway with an archivolt mounted on columns, and a semi-circular plaque, inscribed with the words "Town Hall A.D. 1889", installed in place of a fanlight. The other two bays on the ground floor were fenestrated by round headed windows with hood moulds, while, on the first floor, there was a tall round headed window in the central bay and smaller segmental headed windows with hood mounds in the outer bays. The side elevation of six bays, facing Banba Square, was fenestrated by rows of round headed windows, with the ones on the first floor being larger than those on the ground floor. Internally, the principal rooms were an assembly room and a public library. The building, which served as the meeting place of the town commissioners, became the offices and meeting place of Nenagh Urban District Council when it was formed in 1900. During the First World War, the town hall was one of a series of venues where a recruiting officer from the Royal Flying Corps, Lieutenant Charles Alston, gave a lecture about life on the Western Front using lantern slides. The library service relocated to O'Rahilly Street in the early 1980s. The building continued to be used as the offices of the urban district council until 2002, and then as the offices of the successor town council, but ceased to be the local seat of government, when the town council co-located with North Tipperary County Council at a new facility, known as the Civic Offices, on Limerick Road in 2005. A major programme of refurbishment works, intended to create a new a 194-seat theatre, was subsequently implemented. After completion of the works, which cost €1.6 million and were financed by the Department of Tourism, Culture and Sport, North Tipperary County Council and Nenagh Town Council, the building re-opened as the Nenagh Arts Centre in 2010. Further works to establish a tourist information centre in the building were completed in 2020.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Nenagh Arts Centre (Irish: Ionad Ealaíon Aonach Urmhumhan), formerly known as Nenagh Town Hall (Irish: Halla an Bhaile Aonach Urmhumhan), is a municipal building in Banba Square, Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. The building, which was used as the local town hall, now accommodates an arts centre.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In 1884, the town commissioners for Nenagh resolved to erect a town hall and made an application for a loan from the Board of Works. The site they selected, on the east side of Banba Square facing Nenagh Courthouse, had been occupied by the local turf market. The new building was designed by the town surveyor, Robert Paul Gill, (father of Tomás Mac Giolla), in the Italianate style, built by Michael Grace in rubble masonry at a cost of £2,000 and was completed in 1889.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage of three bays facing south onto Peter Street (later renamed Kickham Street). The left hand-bay featured a round headed doorway with an archivolt mounted on columns, and a semi-circular plaque, inscribed with the words \"Town Hall A.D. 1889\", installed in place of a fanlight. The other two bays on the ground floor were fenestrated by round headed windows with hood moulds, while, on the first floor, there was a tall round headed window in the central bay and smaller segmental headed windows with hood mounds in the outer bays. The side elevation of six bays, facing Banba Square, was fenestrated by rows of round headed windows, with the ones on the first floor being larger than those on the ground floor. Internally, the principal rooms were an assembly room and a public library.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The building, which served as the meeting place of the town commissioners, became the offices and meeting place of Nenagh Urban District Council when it was formed in 1900. During the First World War, the town hall was one of a series of venues where a recruiting officer from the Royal Flying Corps, Lieutenant Charles Alston, gave a lecture about life on the Western Front using lantern slides.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The library service relocated to O'Rahilly Street in the early 1980s. The building continued to be used as the offices of the urban district council until 2002, and then as the offices of the successor town council, but ceased to be the local seat of government, when the town council co-located with North Tipperary County Council at a new facility, known as the Civic Offices, on Limerick Road in 2005.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "A major programme of refurbishment works, intended to create a new a 194-seat theatre, was subsequently implemented. After completion of the works, which cost €1.6 million and were financed by the Department of Tourism, Culture and Sport, North Tipperary County Council and Nenagh Town Council, the building re-opened as the Nenagh Arts Centre in 2010. Further works to establish a tourist information centre in the building were completed in 2020.", "title": "History" } ]
Nenagh Arts Centre, formerly known as Nenagh Town Hall, is a municipal building in Banba Square, Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. The building, which was used as the local town hall, now accommodates an arts centre.
2023-12-06T23:55:35Z
2023-12-24T18:16:30Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nenagh_Arts_Centre
75,503,722
Lura Harris Craighead
Lura Harris Craighead (1858–1926) was an American author and parliamentarian, actively involved with civic and club work. She served as president of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs. Lura Harris was born January 17, 1858, at Nashville, Tennessee. She was the daughter of Major William Hooper and Frances Virginia (Martin) Harris, the former one of the first volunteers from Davidson County, Tennessee, in the Confederate States Army serving first as lieutenant in Co. A, 1st battalion, Tennessee cavalry, transferred to Gen. Joseph Wheeler's cavalry, and promoted to rank of major, being made chief quartermaster and a member of Wheeler's staff, afterwards quartermaster of Frank Hume's brigade, had part in several hard fought campaigns in Wheeler's division, a commission as colonel was made out for him just prior to the close of the war, but it never reached him, was slightly wounded once, captured and in prison once. Before the war, he was engaged in the wholesale grocery business in Nashville, afterwards for several years was at the head of a large business in New York City, later was engaged in the cotton brokerage business in Nashville, and died at the home of his daughter, Lura, at Mobile, Alabama, August 11, 1908. She was the granddaughter of Nathan and Janet (Lowry) Harris, the former a surgeon, and for many years in the employ of the U. S. government at the Cherokee Indian agency, in Tennessee, and of Dr. Charles Kennan Venable and Frances Holder (Williams) Martin of Nashville. She was the great-great-granddaughter of Robert and Mary (Venable) Martin, the former of King and Queen County, Virginia, located and married, later, in Prince Edward County, Virginia served in both the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War, and one of the founders of Methodism in Virginia; of Richard Kennon, a member of the Provincial Congress from Chatham County, North Carolina, 1775, and was re-elected, 1779, assisted in establishing a regular government, resting entirely on popular authority, instead of the royal government, and annihilated every vestige of the power of the last royal governor of North Carolina, and a signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence; of Jesse Williams, one of the first to enlist from Culpeper County, Virginia in the war of 1776, held the rank of captain, and was in the battles of Great Bridge, Long Island, Harlem Heights, and the siege of Boston; and of John Holder, closely identified with Colonel Richard Callaway in his Kentucky career, married his daughter Frances, the Frances Callaway, who, with her sister, Elizabeth, and Jemima Boone, daughter of Daniel Boone, was captured by a roving band of Indians, July 14, 1776, while paddling about in a canoe on the Kentucky River just below the fort of Boonesborough, the young women being rescued by a party in which were included the three young men to whom they were betrothed, John Holder being one. She was the great-great-great-granddaughter of Charles Venable, a descendant of William Venable, Duke of Vernon, and of French origin, and of Richard Callaway, one of those bold delegates who were called together just outside the fort of Boonesborough to organize the government of Transylvania, who signed the Transylvania Declaration of Independence, May 23, 1775, captain in the French and Indian wars prior to 1758, one of the trustees to lay out the town of New London, Virginia, and one of two commissioners to mark and make the first public road over the Cumberland Mountains into Kentucky County, Virginia, justice of the peace, Kentucky County, 1776, member House of Burgesses from the same county, April, 1777, re-elected 1779, one of the most valiant defenders of Boonesborough, especially in the Duquesne Siege, 1778, killed by Indians in ambush, March, 1780; of Robert and Mourning (Glenn) Harris, the former a member of the House of Burgesses from Hanover, surveyor for Louisa County, Virginia, justice of the peace, moved to Albemarle County, Virginia and became large land owner from grant and in purchase, colonel the Albemarle militia, lived in Brown's Cove.name="Owen1921" /> She was the great-great-great-greatgreat-granddaughter of Robert and Mary (Claiborne) Rice-Harris, 1630–1701, the former came from the town of Harrisonton, Glamorgan, Wales, about 1650, and settled on the James River in Virginia, married Mary Claiborne Rice, daughter of Sir William Claiborne, also great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter of Sir William and Elizabeth (Butler) Claiborne. Craighead received her early education in Miss Mary Dunn's private school, Nashville. She attended the public schools of New York City, and Ward–Belmont College, Nashville. She graduated from the Patapsco Female Institute, Baltimore, Maryland. Craighead was a charter member, and first vice-president of the board of directors of the Alabama Boys' Industrial School, appointed by Gov. Joseph F. Johnston. She was a charter member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Craighead served as president of the Mobile art league and school, 1897–99, the Mobile Reading club, Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs, 1899–1900, Mobile Shakespeare club, Mobile city and county school improvement association, St. Cecilia Chorus, Clara Schumann club, 1894–95, and the Benevolent home for aged and dependent women. She served as chair of the Mobile council of defense, woman's division; and the Mobile illiteracy campaign, 1916. She was a member of the committee on school improvement, Alabama federation of women's clubs from 1905, when it was organized, until it asked to be discharged, 1911, having completed its mission and introduced organized effort in each of the sixty-seven counties of the state. She led two campaigns in Mobile for the retention of kindergartens in the public school system of that city. She was a member of the War Camp community service during World War I, the Suffrage association, and the legislative committee of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs. She was particularly active in the effort to secure a law regulating child labor, resulting in one of the best child labor laws in the U.S. At the time of her death, Craighead was a member of the juvenile court commission and of the Alabama Child Welfare commission. In addition to the foregoing, Craighead worked and spoke throughout the state on civic, educational and patriotic subjects. Craighead was the author of Lessons on parliamentary law, a text book and manual; the leaflet, "Instant answer to everyday questions on parliamentary law"; a pamphlet, "All the pros and cons concerning child-labor", used as campaign propaganda by the Alabama and Georgia federations of women's clubs. History of Alabama federation of women's clubs was published posthumously. In addition, she wrote numerous newspaper articles and circulars in the interest of educational institutions, better laws, and philanthropic, civic and patriotic enterprises. She was a Democrat and Episcopalian. In 1878, in Nashville, she married Erwin Craighead. They had a son, Frank. She made her home in Mobile. She died in Mobile, Alabama, January 27, 1926, after a lingering illness.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Lura Harris Craighead (1858–1926) was an American author and parliamentarian, actively involved with civic and club work. She served as president of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Lura Harris was born January 17, 1858, at Nashville, Tennessee. She was the daughter of Major William Hooper and Frances Virginia (Martin) Harris, the former one of the first volunteers from Davidson County, Tennessee, in the Confederate States Army serving first as lieutenant in Co. A, 1st battalion, Tennessee cavalry, transferred to Gen. Joseph Wheeler's cavalry, and promoted to rank of major, being made chief quartermaster and a member of Wheeler's staff, afterwards quartermaster of Frank Hume's brigade, had part in several hard fought campaigns in Wheeler's division, a commission as colonel was made out for him just prior to the close of the war, but it never reached him, was slightly wounded once, captured and in prison once. Before the war, he was engaged in the wholesale grocery business in Nashville, afterwards for several years was at the head of a large business in New York City, later was engaged in the cotton brokerage business in Nashville, and died at the home of his daughter, Lura, at Mobile, Alabama, August 11, 1908.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "She was the granddaughter of Nathan and Janet (Lowry) Harris, the former a surgeon, and for many years in the employ of the U. S. government at the Cherokee Indian agency, in Tennessee, and of Dr. Charles Kennan Venable and Frances Holder (Williams) Martin of Nashville.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "She was the great-great-granddaughter of Robert and Mary (Venable) Martin, the former of King and Queen County, Virginia, located and married, later, in Prince Edward County, Virginia served in both the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War, and one of the founders of Methodism in Virginia; of Richard Kennon, a member of the Provincial Congress from Chatham County, North Carolina, 1775, and was re-elected, 1779, assisted in establishing a regular government, resting entirely on popular authority, instead of the royal government, and annihilated every vestige of the power of the last royal governor of North Carolina, and a signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence; of Jesse Williams, one of the first to enlist from Culpeper County, Virginia in the war of 1776, held the rank of captain, and was in the battles of Great Bridge, Long Island, Harlem Heights, and the siege of Boston; and of John Holder, closely identified with Colonel Richard Callaway in his Kentucky career, married his daughter Frances, the Frances Callaway, who, with her sister, Elizabeth, and Jemima Boone, daughter of Daniel Boone, was captured by a roving band of Indians, July 14, 1776, while paddling about in a canoe on the Kentucky River just below the fort of Boonesborough, the young women being rescued by a party in which were included the three young men to whom they were betrothed, John Holder being one. She was the great-great-great-granddaughter of Charles Venable, a descendant of William Venable, Duke of Vernon, and of French origin, and of Richard Callaway, one of those bold delegates who were called together just outside the fort of Boonesborough to organize the government of Transylvania, who signed the Transylvania Declaration of Independence, May 23, 1775, captain in the French and Indian wars prior to 1758, one of the trustees to lay out the town of New London, Virginia, and one of two commissioners to mark and make the first public road over the Cumberland Mountains into Kentucky County, Virginia, justice of the peace, Kentucky County, 1776, member House of Burgesses from the same county, April, 1777, re-elected 1779, one of the most valiant defenders of Boonesborough, especially in the Duquesne Siege, 1778, killed by Indians in ambush, March, 1780; of Robert and Mourning (Glenn) Harris, the former a member of the House of Burgesses from Hanover, surveyor for Louisa County, Virginia, justice of the peace, moved to Albemarle County, Virginia and became large land owner from grant and in purchase, colonel the Albemarle militia, lived in Brown's Cove.name=\"Owen1921\" />", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "She was the great-great-great-greatgreat-granddaughter of Robert and Mary (Claiborne) Rice-Harris, 1630–1701, the former came from the town of Harrisonton, Glamorgan, Wales, about 1650, and settled on the James River in Virginia, married Mary Claiborne Rice, daughter of Sir William Claiborne, also great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter of Sir William and Elizabeth (Butler) Claiborne.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Craighead received her early education in Miss Mary Dunn's private school, Nashville. She attended the public schools of New York City, and Ward–Belmont College, Nashville. She graduated from the Patapsco Female Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.", "title": "Early life and education" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Craighead was a charter member, and first vice-president of the board of directors of the Alabama Boys' Industrial School, appointed by Gov. Joseph F. Johnston. She was a charter member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Craighead served as president of the Mobile art league and school, 1897–99, the Mobile Reading club, Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs, 1899–1900, Mobile Shakespeare club, Mobile city and county school improvement association, St. Cecilia Chorus, Clara Schumann club, 1894–95, and the Benevolent home for aged and dependent women. She served as chair of the Mobile council of defense, woman's division; and the Mobile illiteracy campaign, 1916. She was a member of the committee on school improvement, Alabama federation of women's clubs from 1905, when it was organized, until it asked to be discharged, 1911, having completed its mission and introduced organized effort in each of the sixty-seven counties of the state. She led two campaigns in Mobile for the retention of kindergartens in the public school system of that city. She was a member of the War Camp community service during World War I, the Suffrage association, and the legislative committee of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs. She was particularly active in the effort to secure a law regulating child labor, resulting in one of the best child labor laws in the U.S. At the time of her death, Craighead was a member of the juvenile court commission and of the Alabama Child Welfare commission.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In addition to the foregoing, Craighead worked and spoke throughout the state on civic, educational and patriotic subjects.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Craighead was the author of Lessons on parliamentary law, a text book and manual; the leaflet, \"Instant answer to everyday questions on parliamentary law\"; a pamphlet, \"All the pros and cons concerning child-labor\", used as campaign propaganda by the Alabama and Georgia federations of women's clubs. History of Alabama federation of women's clubs was published posthumously. In addition, she wrote numerous newspaper articles and circulars in the interest of educational institutions, better laws, and philanthropic, civic and patriotic enterprises.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "She was a Democrat and Episcopalian.", "title": "Personal life" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "In 1878, in Nashville, she married Erwin Craighead. They had a son, Frank. She made her home in Mobile.", "title": "Personal life" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "She died in Mobile, Alabama, January 27, 1926, after a lingering illness.", "title": "Personal life" } ]
Lura Harris Craighead (1858–1926) was an American author and parliamentarian, actively involved with civic and club work. She served as president of the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs.
2023-12-07T00:03:20Z
2023-12-10T18:46:37Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Source-attribution", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Cite magazine", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Authority control", "Template:Infobox writer" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lura_Harris_Craighead
75,503,812
Katshinau
Katshinau (French: Les Mains sales, lit. "Dirty Hands") is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Jani Bellefleur-Kaltush and Julien G. Marcotte, and released in 2023. The film stars Soleil Launière as Marie, an indigenous slave in New France who is driven to undertake radical actions to secure her freedom. The cast also includes Fred-Eric Salvail, Geneviève Boivin-Roussy, Dorothée Gauthier Nolett, Ryan Bommarito, Benoît Mauffette and Adrien Lessard. The film premiered at the 2023 Vancouver International Film Festival, where it was named the winner of the award for Best Canadian Short Film. The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Katshinau (French: Les Mains sales, lit. \"Dirty Hands\") is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Jani Bellefleur-Kaltush and Julien G. Marcotte, and released in 2023. The film stars Soleil Launière as Marie, an indigenous slave in New France who is driven to undertake radical actions to secure her freedom.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The cast also includes Fred-Eric Salvail, Geneviève Boivin-Roussy, Dorothée Gauthier Nolett, Ryan Bommarito, Benoît Mauffette and Adrien Lessard.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The film premiered at the 2023 Vancouver International Film Festival, where it was named the winner of the award for Best Canadian Short Film.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.", "title": "" } ]
Katshinau is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Jani Bellefleur-Kaltush and Julien G. Marcotte, and released in 2023. The film stars Soleil Launière as Marie, an indigenous slave in New France who is driven to undertake radical actions to secure her freedom. The cast also includes Fred-Eric Salvail, Geneviève Boivin-Roussy, Dorothée Gauthier Nolett, Ryan Bommarito, Benoît Mauffette and Adrien Lessard. The film premiered at the 2023 Vancouver International Film Festival, where it was named the winner of the award for Best Canadian Short Film. The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.
2023-12-07T00:10:42Z
2023-12-10T18:20:30Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katshinau
75,503,845
Kerkük Sanjak
The Kirkuk Sanjak (Turkish: Kerkük Sancağı, كركوك سنجاغى) was a second-level administrative division that included parts of the governorates of Saladin, Sulaymaniah, and Diyala, as well as all of Erbil and Kirkuk. Its capital was Kirkuk. In 1534, the Ottoman Empire incorporated the region of Kirkuk, along with much of present-day Iraq, into its domains. Kirkuk's importance grew in the 18th century when it became the capital of the Ottoman Sanjak of Şehrizor, which included the territories of Kirkuk, Erbil, and Sulaymaniyah. Following the reforms of Midhat Pasha, who served as governor of Baghdad between 1869 and 1872, the Sanjak of Kirkuk was renamed Şehrizor, corresponding to the present-day areas of Kirkuk and Erbil. In 1879, the Ottoman government in Istanbul created the Mosul vilayet which included most of present-day northern Iraq. Kirkuk remained an important garrison city and a valuable Ottoman recruiting center for civil servants and gendarmes because of its language and population composition. The city flourished with Ottoman culture.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Kirkuk Sanjak (Turkish: Kerkük Sancağı, كركوك سنجاغى) was a second-level administrative division that included parts of the governorates of Saladin, Sulaymaniah, and Diyala, as well as all of Erbil and Kirkuk. Its capital was Kirkuk.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In 1534, the Ottoman Empire incorporated the region of Kirkuk, along with much of present-day Iraq, into its domains. Kirkuk's importance grew in the 18th century when it became the capital of the Ottoman Sanjak of Şehrizor, which included the territories of Kirkuk, Erbil, and Sulaymaniyah. Following the reforms of Midhat Pasha, who served as governor of Baghdad between 1869 and 1872, the Sanjak of Kirkuk was renamed Şehrizor, corresponding to the present-day areas of Kirkuk and Erbil. In 1879, the Ottoman government in Istanbul created the Mosul vilayet which included most of present-day northern Iraq. Kirkuk remained an important garrison city and a valuable Ottoman recruiting center for civil servants and gendarmes because of its language and population composition. The city flourished with Ottoman culture.", "title": "History" } ]
The Kirkuk Sanjak was a second-level administrative division that included parts of the governorates of Saladin, Sulaymaniah, and Diyala, as well as all of Erbil and Kirkuk. Its capital was Kirkuk.
2023-12-07T00:16:12Z
2023-12-26T11:10:35Z
[ "Template:Infobox Former Subdivision", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Multiple issues" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerk%C3%BCk_Sanjak
75,503,858
Thanks for Knocking Me Down
Thanks for Knocking Me Down (Hungarian: Köszönöm, hogy elgázolt) is a 1935 Hungarian romantic comedy film directed by Emil Martonffy and starring Ida Turay, Pál Jávor and Antal Páger. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze. When Sándor Balázs goes for a drive in the countryside, his car is taken by out-of-work singer Peter who then proceeds to knock down Panni who is bored with life in the village and yearns for something exciting to happen. This launches her on a fulfilling adventure involving romance and mistaken identity and concludes with her moving to Budapest.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Thanks for Knocking Me Down (Hungarian: Köszönöm, hogy elgázolt) is a 1935 Hungarian romantic comedy film directed by Emil Martonffy and starring Ida Turay, Pál Jávor and Antal Páger. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "When Sándor Balázs goes for a drive in the countryside, his car is taken by out-of-work singer Peter who then proceeds to knock down Panni who is bored with life in the village and yearns for something exciting to happen. This launches her on a fulfilling adventure involving romance and mistaken identity and concludes with her moving to Budapest.", "title": "Synopsis" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
Thanks for Knocking Me Down is a 1935 Hungarian romantic comedy film directed by Emil Martonffy and starring Ida Turay, Pál Jávor and Antal Páger. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze.
2023-12-07T00:17:14Z
2023-12-20T23:44:10Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox film", "Template:Reflist", "Template:IMDb title", "Template:Emil Martonffy", "Template:Hungary-film-stub" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanks_for_Knocking_Me_Down
75,503,896
Erika von Erhardt-Siebold
Erika Helena Henrietta Wanda Freifrau von Siebold (January 15, 1890 – November 9, 1964) was an American literary scholar who specialized in Anglo-Saxon riddles. Born in Germany, she emigrated to the United States and worked as a professor at Wittenberg College, Mount Holyoke College, and Vassar College. Erika Helena Henriette Vanda Freiin von Siebold was born on January 15, 1890 in Würzburg, Kingdom of Bavaria. Her father Alexander von Siebold was a translator and interpreter and his paternal grandfather Philipp Franz von Siebold was a physician and botanist. After studying at the University of Cambridge and getting a PhD at Heidelberg University in 1918, she began work as a lecturer in English in Germany and Russia, working at the University of Dorpat, University of Freiburg, University of Rostock, and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. In 1918, she published a book about synesthesia. On August 31, 1922, she married Rudolf Friedrich Georg Freiherr von Erhardt at Berlin. In 1925, after spending a year at Bryn Mawr College (1924–1925) on an European Fellowship, von Erhardt-Siebold started working as an Associate Professor of French at Wittenberg College. In 1927, she moved to Mount Holyoke College and started working there as an Associate Professor of English Literature. In 1933, she joined the faculty of Vassar College, and she was associate professor of English by 1942. At some time in 1953, she worked at the University of California, Berkeley on research leave. As an academic, she specialized "in the fields of Old and Middle English and Romanticism", especially Anglo-Saxon riddles, having published a German-language book on the subject in 1925. In March 1938, she published a report that the origins of the word dandelion were connected to dialion, a Latin word for the daily sun path. In 1940, as part of Vassar's 75th anniversary, she and her husband Rudolf published 'The Astronomy of Scotus Erigena and Cosmology in the Annotationes in Marcianum, both of which were about the studies of John Scotus Eriugena. In January 1942, her lecture "Archaeological Riddles of Anglo-Saxon England" took place at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She was appointed as a Guggenheim Fellow in 1931. At some point before 1942, she was an American Association of University Women fellow. She died on November 9, 1964 in Los Angeles County, California.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Erika Helena Henrietta Wanda Freifrau von Siebold (January 15, 1890 – November 9, 1964) was an American literary scholar who specialized in Anglo-Saxon riddles. Born in Germany, she emigrated to the United States and worked as a professor at Wittenberg College, Mount Holyoke College, and Vassar College.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Erika Helena Henriette Vanda Freiin von Siebold was born on January 15, 1890 in Würzburg, Kingdom of Bavaria. Her father Alexander von Siebold was a translator and interpreter and his paternal grandfather Philipp Franz von Siebold was a physician and botanist. After studying at the University of Cambridge and getting a PhD at Heidelberg University in 1918, she began work as a lecturer in English in Germany and Russia, working at the University of Dorpat, University of Freiburg, University of Rostock, and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. In 1918, she published a book about synesthesia. On August 31, 1922, she married Rudolf Friedrich Georg Freiherr von Erhardt at Berlin.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 1925, after spending a year at Bryn Mawr College (1924–1925) on an European Fellowship, von Erhardt-Siebold started working as an Associate Professor of French at Wittenberg College. In 1927, she moved to Mount Holyoke College and started working there as an Associate Professor of English Literature. In 1933, she joined the faculty of Vassar College, and she was associate professor of English by 1942. At some time in 1953, she worked at the University of California, Berkeley on research leave.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "As an academic, she specialized \"in the fields of Old and Middle English and Romanticism\", especially Anglo-Saxon riddles, having published a German-language book on the subject in 1925. In March 1938, she published a report that the origins of the word dandelion were connected to dialion, a Latin word for the daily sun path. In 1940, as part of Vassar's 75th anniversary, she and her husband Rudolf published 'The Astronomy of Scotus Erigena and Cosmology in the Annotationes in Marcianum, both of which were about the studies of John Scotus Eriugena. In January 1942, her lecture \"Archaeological Riddles of Anglo-Saxon England\" took place at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "She was appointed as a Guggenheim Fellow in 1931. At some point before 1942, she was an American Association of University Women fellow.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "She died on November 9, 1964 in Los Angeles County, California.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Erika Helena Henrietta Wanda Freifrau von Siebold was an American literary scholar who specialized in Anglo-Saxon riddles. Born in Germany, she emigrated to the United States and worked as a professor at Wittenberg College, Mount Holyoke College, and Vassar College.
2023-12-07T00:26:01Z
2023-12-16T17:29:38Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Authority control", "Template:Short description", "Template:Use mdy dates", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Use American English", "Template:Infobox academic" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erika_von_Erhardt-Siebold
75,503,899
Mary Aquinas Devlin
Mary Aquinas Devlin OP (January 27, 1891 – May 14, 1966) was an American Dominican academic who was Professor of English at Rosary College from 1928 until her death. A Guggenheim Fellow, she was a scholar on medieval Bishop of Rochester Thomas Brinton. Devlin was born on January 27, 1891 in Denver, Colorado. She was the daughter of James and Ellen Devlin, both born in Wisconsin to Irish-born parents. In 1912, she received her BA at Saint Clara College. She later moved to Kenosha, Wisconsin, and she received her MA at University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1914 and worked as a teacher at Sacred Heart Academy (1912–14, 1915–18) and at St. Clara Female Academy (1918–21). After briefly returning to Saint Clara College to work as an instructor in English (1921–1922), Devlin returned to the Midwest to work at Rosary College; there, she was Associate Professor of English until 1928, when she was promoted to Professor, serving until her death. She was also head of the College's Department of English some time in 1930. In 1925, while working at Rosary College, she received her PhD at the nearby University of Chicago. Her dissertation was titled The date of the C-version of Piers the Plowman. In 1930, Devlin was appointed as a Guggenheim Fellow to spend twelve months in England studying Thomas Brinton's life and legacy and editing his sermons. She published two academic articles on Brinton's sermons. She was the editor of both of Camden Series volumes of The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester, 1373-1389 (volumes 85 and 86), published in 1954. Devlin died on May 14, 1966, in Dubuque, Iowa. Her mass was held at the Sinsinawa Motherhouse in Sinsinawa, Wisconsin on May 17.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Mary Aquinas Devlin OP (January 27, 1891 – May 14, 1966) was an American Dominican academic who was Professor of English at Rosary College from 1928 until her death. A Guggenheim Fellow, she was a scholar on medieval Bishop of Rochester Thomas Brinton.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Devlin was born on January 27, 1891 in Denver, Colorado. She was the daughter of James and Ellen Devlin, both born in Wisconsin to Irish-born parents. In 1912, she received her BA at Saint Clara College. She later moved to Kenosha, Wisconsin, and she received her MA at University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1914 and worked as a teacher at Sacred Heart Academy (1912–14, 1915–18) and at St. Clara Female Academy (1918–21).", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "After briefly returning to Saint Clara College to work as an instructor in English (1921–1922), Devlin returned to the Midwest to work at Rosary College; there, she was Associate Professor of English until 1928, when she was promoted to Professor, serving until her death. She was also head of the College's Department of English some time in 1930. In 1925, while working at Rosary College, she received her PhD at the nearby University of Chicago. Her dissertation was titled The date of the C-version of Piers the Plowman.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 1930, Devlin was appointed as a Guggenheim Fellow to spend twelve months in England studying Thomas Brinton's life and legacy and editing his sermons. She published two academic articles on Brinton's sermons. She was the editor of both of Camden Series volumes of The Sermons of Thomas Brinton, Bishop of Rochester, 1373-1389 (volumes 85 and 86), published in 1954.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Devlin died on May 14, 1966, in Dubuque, Iowa. Her mass was held at the Sinsinawa Motherhouse in Sinsinawa, Wisconsin on May 17.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Mary Aquinas Devlin OP was an American Dominican academic who was Professor of English at Rosary College from 1928 until her death. A Guggenheim Fellow, she was a scholar on medieval Bishop of Rochester Thomas Brinton.
2023-12-07T00:26:12Z
2023-12-22T11:02:49Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Aquinas_Devlin
75,503,900
G7521 Chongqing–Guiyang Expressway
The G7521 Chongqing–Guiyang Expressway (Chinese: 重庆至贵阳高速公路), also referred to as the Yuzhu Expressway (Chinese: 渝筑高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the direct-administered municipality of Chongqing to the cities of Zunyi and Guiyang in the province of Guizhou.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The G7521 Chongqing–Guiyang Expressway (Chinese: 重庆至贵阳高速公路), also referred to as the Yuzhu Expressway (Chinese: 渝筑高速公路), is an expressway in China that connects the direct-administered municipality of Chongqing to the cities of Zunyi and Guiyang in the province of Guizhou.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
The G7521 Chongqing–Guiyang Expressway, also referred to as the Yuzhu Expressway, is an expressway in China that connects the direct-administered municipality of Chongqing to the cities of Zunyi and Guiyang in the province of Guizhou.
2023-12-07T00:26:20Z
2023-12-12T12:38:34Z
[ "Template:Cite web", "Template:NTHS Expressways", "Template:PRChina-road-stub", "Template:Infobox road", "Template:Zh", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G7521_Chongqing%E2%80%93Guiyang_Expressway
75,503,906
NGC 2210
NGC 2210 is a globular cluster located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation Dorado. It is situated south of the celestial equator and, as such, it is more easily visible from the southern hemisphere. It was first discovered by astronomer John Herschel on January 31st, 1835. In 2017, Rachel Wagner-Kaiser and a group of researchers from the University of Florida discovered that NGC 2210, as well as five other globular clusters located in the Large Magellanic Cloud were of roughly the same age as some star clusters found in the Milky Way, and that NGC 2210 is roughly 11.6 billion years old. It was first imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "NGC 2210 is a globular cluster located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation Dorado. It is situated south of the celestial equator and, as such, it is more easily visible from the southern hemisphere. It was first discovered by astronomer John Herschel on January 31st, 1835. In 2017, Rachel Wagner-Kaiser and a group of researchers from the University of Florida discovered that NGC 2210, as well as five other globular clusters located in the Large Magellanic Cloud were of roughly the same age as some star clusters found in the Milky Way, and that NGC 2210 is roughly 11.6 billion years old. It was first imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2023.", "title": "" } ]
NGC 2210 is a globular cluster located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation Dorado. It is situated south of the celestial equator and, as such, it is more easily visible from the southern hemisphere. It was first discovered by astronomer John Herschel on January 31st, 1835. In 2017, Rachel Wagner-Kaiser and a group of researchers from the University of Florida discovered that NGC 2210, as well as five other globular clusters located in the Large Magellanic Cloud were of roughly the same age as some star clusters found in the Milky Way, and that NGC 2210 is roughly 11.6 billion years old. It was first imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2023.
2023-12-07T00:27:05Z
2023-12-15T00:33:12Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_2210
75,503,919
Édith Jorisch
Édith Jorisch is a Canadian filmmaker from Quebec. She is most noted for her films The Heir (L'héritier), which won a Prix Gémeaux in 2017 and the Michael Moskovitz Award for a Film from the Joseph Isaac Segal Awards for Jewish Literature in 2018, and Mothers and Monsters, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list in 2023. She is the daughter of artist and illustrator Stéphane Jorisch, and an alumna of the Université du Québec à Montréal.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Édith Jorisch is a Canadian filmmaker from Quebec. She is most noted for her films The Heir (L'héritier), which won a Prix Gémeaux in 2017 and the Michael Moskovitz Award for a Film from the Joseph Isaac Segal Awards for Jewish Literature in 2018, and Mothers and Monsters, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list in 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She is the daughter of artist and illustrator Stéphane Jorisch, and an alumna of the Université du Québec à Montréal.", "title": "" } ]
Édith Jorisch is a Canadian filmmaker from Quebec. She is most noted for her films The Heir (L'héritier), which won a Prix Gémeaux in 2017 and the Michael Moskovitz Award for a Film from the Joseph Isaac Segal Awards for Jewish Literature in 2018, and Mothers and Monsters, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list in 2023. She is the daughter of artist and illustrator Stéphane Jorisch, and an alumna of the Université du Québec à Montréal.
2023-12-07T00:29:41Z
2023-12-15T23:08:21Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Imdb name", "Template:Canada-film-director-stub", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89dith_Jorisch
75,503,924
Milan railway station (Xinjiang)
Milan railway station (Chinese: 米兰站) is a railway station located in Ruoqiang County, in the southern part of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. It is also called Miran railway station because it is located near the Miran Ruins, and is one station east of Charkulik railway station (若羌站) on the Golmud–Korla railway (from Golmud, Qinghai to Korla, Xinjiang) in the direction of Golmud. Milan ralway station officially began to be used in December, 2020, with the opening of the Golmud–Korla railway. Moreover, the construction of the branch line from Milan station via the dried-up Lop Nor to Hami railway station in eastern Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, started in 2023, with the target completion in three years.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Milan railway station (Chinese: 米兰站) is a railway station located in Ruoqiang County, in the southern part of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. It is also called Miran railway station because it is located near the Miran Ruins, and is one station east of Charkulik railway station (若羌站) on the Golmud–Korla railway (from Golmud, Qinghai to Korla, Xinjiang) in the direction of Golmud.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Milan ralway station officially began to be used in December, 2020, with the opening of the Golmud–Korla railway. Moreover, the construction of the branch line from Milan station via the dried-up Lop Nor to Hami railway station in eastern Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, started in 2023, with the target completion in three years.", "title": "" } ]
Milan railway station is a railway station located in Ruoqiang County, in the southern part of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. It is also called Miran railway station because it is located near the Miran Ruins, and is one station east of Charkulik railway station (若羌站) on the Golmud–Korla railway in the direction of Golmud. Milan ralway station officially began to be used in December, 2020, with the opening of the Golmud–Korla railway. Moreover, the construction of the branch line from Milan station via the dried-up Lop Nor to Hami railway station in eastern Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, started in 2023, with the target completion in three years.
2023-12-07T00:30:53Z
2023-12-17T04:42:57Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Lang-zh", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan_railway_station_(Xinjiang)
75,503,934
Maz Evans
Maz Evans is a British novelist. In October 2023, The Times called Oh Maya Gods! a "perfectly crafted comedy". Evans is the founder of Book Buddy, which aims to get more books into school libraries. She lives in Bournemouth and London, with her husband and four children. Official website
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Maz Evans is a British novelist.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In October 2023, The Times called Oh Maya Gods! a \"perfectly crafted comedy\".", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Evans is the founder of Book Buddy, which aims to get more books into school libraries. She lives in Bournemouth and London, with her husband and four children.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Official website", "title": "External links" } ]
Maz Evans is a British novelist. In October 2023, The Times called Oh Maya Gods! a "perfectly crafted comedy". Evans is the founder of Book Buddy, which aims to get more books into school libraries. She lives in Bournemouth and London, with her husband and four children.
2023-12-07T00:32:27Z
2023-12-07T13:17:34Z
[ "Template:Official", "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maz_Evans
75,503,948
1991 Manx general election
General elections were held on the Isle of Man on the 21 November 1991 to elect members to the island's lower house: the House of Keys. Independents dominated and won 21 of the 24 seats, whilst the Manx Labour Party once again won 3 seats. Following the general election a vote was held in Tynwald to elect the Chief Minister, with 23 members voting for the continuation of Miles Walker's government, and 10 voting for Edgar Mann. Five of those opposed to the Walker administration agreed to form the Alternative Policy Group with Mann as their leader, this was intended to function as an official opposition to the government, promoting greater autonomy for the island and more government accountability. *2 candidates from the Isle of Man Green Party contested seats in this election, however their vote share was small and their identities are unknown, so their vote shares are included in the 'Independents' results.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "General elections were held on the Isle of Man on the 21 November 1991 to elect members to the island's lower house: the House of Keys. Independents dominated and won 21 of the 24 seats, whilst the Manx Labour Party once again won 3 seats.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Following the general election a vote was held in Tynwald to elect the Chief Minister, with 23 members voting for the continuation of Miles Walker's government, and 10 voting for Edgar Mann. Five of those opposed to the Walker administration agreed to form the Alternative Policy Group with Mann as their leader, this was intended to function as an official opposition to the government, promoting greater autonomy for the island and more government accountability.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "*2 candidates from the Isle of Man Green Party contested seats in this election, however their vote share was small and their identities are unknown, so their vote shares are included in the 'Independents' results.", "title": "Results" } ]
General elections were held on the Isle of Man on the 21 November 1991 to elect members to the island's lower house: the House of Keys. Independents dominated and won 21 of the 24 seats, whilst the Manx Labour Party once again won 3 seats. Following the general election a vote was held in Tynwald to elect the Chief Minister, with 23 members voting for the continuation of Miles Walker's government, and 10 voting for Edgar Mann. Five of those opposed to the Walker administration agreed to form the Alternative Policy Group with Mann as their leader, this was intended to function as an official opposition to the government, promoting greater autonomy for the island and more government accountability.
2023-12-07T00:35:24Z
2023-12-11T20:33:14Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991_Manx_general_election
75,503,951
Swimming at the 2006 Commonwealth Games – Men's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay
The 4 × 200 metres freestyle relay was at Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre on 18 March. There was only one heat. Prior to this competition, the existing world, Commonwealth and Games records were as follows: The final was held at 9:11 pm.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 4 × 200 metres freestyle relay was at Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre on 18 March. There was only one heat.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Prior to this competition, the existing world, Commonwealth and Games records were as follows:", "title": "Records" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The final was held at 9:11 pm.", "title": "Final" } ]
The 4 × 200 metres freestyle relay was at Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre on 18 March. There was only one heat.
2023-12-07T00:35:46Z
2023-12-11T07:38:57Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swimming_at_the_2006_Commonwealth_Games_%E2%80%93_Men%27s_4_%C3%97_200_metre_freestyle_relay
75,503,988
Sala Al Jadida
Sala Al Jadida (Arabic: سلا الجديدة) is a city in central Morocco with a population of 200,000 recorded in the 2014 Moroccan census. It is situated on the suburbs of Salé and Rabat. In Arabic, "Sala Al Jadida" translates to "New Salé".
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Sala Al Jadida (Arabic: سلا الجديدة) is a city in central Morocco with a population of 200,000 recorded in the 2014 Moroccan census. It is situated on the suburbs of Salé and Rabat. In Arabic, \"Sala Al Jadida\" translates to \"New Salé\".", "title": "" } ]
Sala Al Jadida is a city in central Morocco with a population of 200,000 recorded in the 2014 Moroccan census. It is situated on the suburbs of Salé and Rabat. In Arabic, "Sala Al Jadida" translates to "New Salé".
2023-12-07T00:39:58Z
2023-12-07T05:09:46Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sala_Al_Jadida
75,504,003
Aras Mountains
Aras Mountains (Turkish: Aras Dağları, Armenian: Հայկական Պար), is a mountain range in northeastern Turkey. Also known as Haykakan Par. It is located on the border of Erzurum, Kars, Ağrı and Iğdır provinces. The Aras Mountains formed the borders of the Kingdom of Erikua and Urartu in ancient times. The crossings above it, on the other hand, have been the most important defense points where the borders of the two countries are protected. The Aras Mountains start from the Erzurum border, pass the Ağrı and Kars borders, and end in the west of Mount Ararat. This mountain range, extending from west to east, divides the geography it passes through into two in the north-south direction. The most important elevations of the mountains are Zor and Pamuk mountains. Doğubayazıt district center is located in the south of the Karasu-Aras Mountains, Iğdır is in the north. Lale Balık is located in the Aras Mountains. Doğubayazıt Reeds are located to the east of Zor Dağ, which is part of the Aras Mountains.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Aras Mountains (Turkish: Aras Dağları, Armenian: Հայկական Պար), is a mountain range in northeastern Turkey. Also known as Haykakan Par. It is located on the border of Erzurum, Kars, Ağrı and Iğdır provinces.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The Aras Mountains formed the borders of the Kingdom of Erikua and Urartu in ancient times. The crossings above it, on the other hand, have been the most important defense points where the borders of the two countries are protected.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The Aras Mountains start from the Erzurum border, pass the Ağrı and Kars borders, and end in the west of Mount Ararat. This mountain range, extending from west to east, divides the geography it passes through into two in the north-south direction. The most important elevations of the mountains are Zor and Pamuk mountains. Doğubayazıt district center is located in the south of the Karasu-Aras Mountains, Iğdır is in the north. Lale Balık is located in the Aras Mountains. Doğubayazıt Reeds are located to the east of Zor Dağ, which is part of the Aras Mountains.", "title": "Geology and geomorphology" } ]
Aras Mountains, is a mountain range in northeastern Turkey. Also known as Haykakan Par. It is located on the border of Erzurum, Kars, Ağrı and Iğdır provinces.
2023-12-07T00:41:41Z
2023-12-29T17:09:23Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aras_Mountains
75,504,016
Kyanno Silva
Kyanno Lorenzo Miranda de Brito e Silva (born 24 May 2005) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays for Benfica. He is a Dutch youth international. From Schiedam, near Rotterdam in the Nertherlands, he initially trained in the youth team of Feyenoord. He then joined the youth academy of Sparta Rotterdam in 2017. He agreed a three-year contract with Portugese giants Benfica in 2021. He featured that season for the Benfica U19 side at 16 years-of-age. Although eligible to represent Netherlands or Portugal, he has featured for Dutch international youth sides. In November 2023, he had graduated to play for the Netherlands U19 side, appearing as a second half substitute against Luxembourg U19. He has been described as a left-footed attacker who plays on the right wing. Raised in the Netherlands, his father is Portugese.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kyanno Lorenzo Miranda de Brito e Silva (born 24 May 2005) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays for Benfica. He is a Dutch youth international.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "From Schiedam, near Rotterdam in the Nertherlands, he initially trained in the youth team of Feyenoord. He then joined the youth academy of Sparta Rotterdam in 2017. He agreed a three-year contract with Portugese giants Benfica in 2021. He featured that season for the Benfica U19 side at 16 years-of-age.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Although eligible to represent Netherlands or Portugal, he has featured for Dutch international youth sides. In November 2023, he had graduated to play for the Netherlands U19 side, appearing as a second half substitute against Luxembourg U19.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "He has been described as a left-footed attacker who plays on the right wing.", "title": "Style of play" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Raised in the Netherlands, his father is Portugese.", "title": "Personal life" } ]
Kyanno Lorenzo Miranda de Brito e Silva is a Dutch professional footballer who plays for Benfica. He is a Dutch youth international.
2023-12-07T00:43:55Z
2023-12-29T20:36:16Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Portuguese name", "Template:Infobox football biography", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyanno_Silva
75,504,037
Hirata Kanetane
Hirata Kanetane (平田 銕胤, 1799-1880) was a Japanese scholar of kokugaku. He studied under Hirata Atsutane, and later became his adopted son and heir. Hirata Kanetane was born under the name Midorikawa Atsuzane (碧川 篤実) as the eldest son of Midorikawa Emonpachi (碧川 衛門八), a retainer of Katō Yasutada, lord of the Niiya Domain. In the summer of 1820, Kanetane came across a number of books by Hirata Atsutane in a bookstore and after reading them decided to devote himself to kokugaku. In 1822, Kanetane travelled to Edo to enroll in Hirata Atsutane's school of kokugaku, the Ibukinoya. On January 15, 1824, Atsutane formally adopted Kanetane as his heir. Kanetane later married Atsutane's daughter, Chie (千枝). In 1841, Atsutane was barred from publishing and expelled from Edo back to his native Kubota Domain by the shogunate's censors. Kanetane accompanied him to Kubota. Atsutane died soon after in 1843 and the Ibukinoya fully came under Kanetane's leadership. On December 28, 1850, the injunction against the publication of Atsutane's writings was lifted and the Ibukinoya was able to resume public operation During the Ansei era, Satake Yoshitaka, lord of the Kubota Domain, commanded Kanetane to use the nationwide network of Hirata disciples to gather and compile information on national affairs. The results of Kanetane's research was compiled under the title Fū'un himitsu tanteiroku [ja]. This project is notable for having been an early political use of the power of the kokugaku movement. After the Boshin War, Kanetane briefly headed the revived Jingikan before its abolition by the progressivist government. His heir Nobutane died in 1872. Kanetane himself died in 1880.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Hirata Kanetane (平田 銕胤, 1799-1880) was a Japanese scholar of kokugaku. He studied under Hirata Atsutane, and later became his adopted son and heir.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Hirata Kanetane was born under the name Midorikawa Atsuzane (碧川 篤実) as the eldest son of Midorikawa Emonpachi (碧川 衛門八), a retainer of Katō Yasutada, lord of the Niiya Domain. In the summer of 1820, Kanetane came across a number of books by Hirata Atsutane in a bookstore and after reading them decided to devote himself to kokugaku.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 1822, Kanetane travelled to Edo to enroll in Hirata Atsutane's school of kokugaku, the Ibukinoya. On January 15, 1824, Atsutane formally adopted Kanetane as his heir. Kanetane later married Atsutane's daughter, Chie (千枝).", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 1841, Atsutane was barred from publishing and expelled from Edo back to his native Kubota Domain by the shogunate's censors. Kanetane accompanied him to Kubota. Atsutane died soon after in 1843 and the Ibukinoya fully came under Kanetane's leadership. On December 28, 1850, the injunction against the publication of Atsutane's writings was lifted and the Ibukinoya was able to resume public operation", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "During the Ansei era, Satake Yoshitaka, lord of the Kubota Domain, commanded Kanetane to use the nationwide network of Hirata disciples to gather and compile information on national affairs. The results of Kanetane's research was compiled under the title Fū'un himitsu tanteiroku [ja]. This project is notable for having been an early political use of the power of the kokugaku movement.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "After the Boshin War, Kanetane briefly headed the revived Jingikan before its abolition by the progressivist government. His heir Nobutane died in 1872. Kanetane himself died in 1880.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Hirata Kanetane was a Japanese scholar of kokugaku. He studied under Hirata Atsutane, and later became his adopted son and heir.
2023-12-07T00:48:50Z
2023-12-25T07:43:47Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirata_Kanetane
75,504,049
2023 America East Conference women's soccer tournament
The 2023 America East Conference women's soccer tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the America East Conference held from October 30 through November 5, 2023. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the New Hampshire Wildcats, who were unable to defend their title after falling in the first round to Vermont. Maine won the tournament after an overtime victory in the final over UMass Lowell. It was the first victory in program history for Maine and the first for twenty-third year head coach Scott Atherly. As tournament champions, Maine earned the America East's automatic berth into the 2023 NCAA Division I women's soccer tournament. The top six teams in the regular season earned a spot in the tournament. There were 18 goals scored in 5 matches, for an average of 3.6 goals per match (as of November 5, 2023). Source: MVP in bold
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2023 America East Conference women's soccer tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the America East Conference held from October 30 through November 5, 2023. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the New Hampshire Wildcats, who were unable to defend their title after falling in the first round to Vermont. Maine won the tournament after an overtime victory in the final over UMass Lowell. It was the first victory in program history for Maine and the first for twenty-third year head coach Scott Atherly. As tournament champions, Maine earned the America East's automatic berth into the 2023 NCAA Division I women's soccer tournament.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The top six teams in the regular season earned a spot in the tournament.", "title": "Seeding" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "There were 18 goals scored in 5 matches, for an average of 3.6 goals per match (as of November 5, 2023).", "title": "Statistics" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Source:", "title": "All-Tournament team" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "MVP in bold", "title": "All-Tournament team" } ]
The 2023 America East Conference women's soccer tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the America East Conference held from October 30 through November 5, 2023. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the New Hampshire Wildcats, who were unable to defend their title after falling in the first round to Vermont. Maine won the tournament after an overtime victory in the final over UMass Lowell. It was the first victory in program history for Maine and the first for twenty-third year head coach Scott Atherly. As tournament champions, Maine earned the America East's automatic berth into the 2023 NCAA Division I women's soccer tournament.
2023-12-07T00:50:14Z
2023-12-07T01:24:46Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_America_East_Conference_women%27s_soccer_tournament
75,504,061
Plaza Mayor (shopping center)
Plaza Mayoris the largest mall in León, with 117,000 m (1,260,000 sq ft) gross leasable area, of which 70,000 m (750,000 sq ft) is retail floor space, and parking for 2,500 cars. Plaza Mayor is anchored by: Plaza Mayor will soon add a ca. 30,000 m (320,000 sq ft) Palacio de Hierro under construction, to open in 2024. León is one of only eight metropolitan areas in Mexico to boast a full-line Palacio store, a reflection on that company's hopes for the high-end retail potential of León and other nearby cities in El Bajío such as San Miguel de Allende and Guanajuato city.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Plaza Mayoris the largest mall in León, with 117,000 m (1,260,000 sq ft) gross leasable area, of which 70,000 m (750,000 sq ft) is retail floor space, and parking for 2,500 cars.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Plaza Mayor is anchored by:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Plaza Mayor will soon add a ca. 30,000 m (320,000 sq ft) Palacio de Hierro under construction, to open in 2024. León is one of only eight metropolitan areas in Mexico to boast a full-line Palacio store, a reflection on that company's hopes for the high-end retail potential of León and other nearby cities in El Bajío such as San Miguel de Allende and Guanajuato city.", "title": "Palacio de Hierro" } ]
Plaza Mayoris the largest mall in León, with 117,000 m2 (1,260,000 sq ft) gross leasable area, of which 70,000 m2 (750,000 sq ft) is retail floor space, and parking for 2,500 cars. Plaza Mayor is anchored by: Sears full-line department store Liverpool, a full-line department store, which has plans to expand to 27,000 m2 (290,000 sq ft) West Elm, U.S.-based furniture superstore Innovasport, a 100+-store Monterrrey-based chain of activewear and sporting goods superstores Sanborns junior department store and restaurant Cinemex multicinema Best Buy was an anchor until the company closed entirely in Mexico
2023-12-07T00:51:59Z
2023-12-07T00:59:09Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plaza_Mayor_(shopping_center)
75,504,071
HistoriCorps
HistoriCorps is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that mobilizes volunteers to learn preservation skills and, with HistoriCorps field staff, to engage in work to save historic places that have fallen into disrepair and to preserve historic sites throughout the USA. In its first year as a nonprofit, HistoriCorps had preserved over 150 historic structures in 24 states. HistoriCorps has formalized partnerships with federal, state, and local governments as well as community-based nonprofits. Federal partners include the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. This article incorporates public domain material from HistoriCorps. Advisory Council On Historic Preservation.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "HistoriCorps is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that mobilizes volunteers to learn preservation skills and, with HistoriCorps field staff, to engage in work to save historic places that have fallen into disrepair and to preserve historic sites throughout the USA.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In its first year as a nonprofit, HistoriCorps had preserved over 150 historic structures in 24 states. HistoriCorps has formalized partnerships with federal, state, and local governments as well as community-based nonprofits. Federal partners include the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "This article incorporates public domain material from HistoriCorps. Advisory Council On Historic Preservation.", "title": "References" } ]
HistoriCorps is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that mobilizes volunteers to learn preservation skills and, with HistoriCorps field staff, to engage in work to save historic places that have fallen into disrepair and to preserve historic sites throughout the USA. In its first year as a nonprofit, HistoriCorps had preserved over 150 historic structures in 24 states. HistoriCorps has formalized partnerships with federal, state, and local governments as well as community-based nonprofits. Federal partners include the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
2023-12-07T00:52:48Z
2023-12-15T23:23:43Z
[ "Template:Infobox organization", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Include-USGov", "Template:Close paraphrasing", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HistoriCorps
75,504,095
Kyiv Slavonic University
Kiev Slavic University (Ukrainian: Київський славістичний університет) is a private higher education institution in Ukraine at IV level of accreditation, founded in 1993 under the Academy of Sciences as Kiev Institute "Slavic University". On 9 November 1993, the constituent meeting of the founding members of the non-governmental organization Kiev Slavic University was held in the premises of the Presidium of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. The collective members of the organization were: the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, the Drahomanov State Pedagogical University of Ukraine, the Stock Exchange of Ukraine, the Youth Committee of the Kyiv State Administration, the Main Department of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, the Trade Union Federation of Ukraine, the Moscow Branch of the Prominvestbank of Ukraine, the Topographic and Geological Survey Colleges of Kyiv, the research and production company "TEP" and many other public and commercial organizations. On November 25, 1993, the Ministry of Justice of Kiev issued a law on the state registration of the Kiev Slavic University (the date of its official foundation). The purpose of the university was to train highly qualified specialists in a wide range of fields and specialties and to conduct research on Slavic studies. December 30, 1993. The Kiev Slavic University was inaugurated in Kiev. The university was inaugurated by Archimandrite Seraphim. The first lecture for the students of preparatory university education and secondary school students of Kyiv schools was delivered by the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Slovak Republic to Ukraine Robert Harenchar.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kiev Slavic University (Ukrainian: Київський славістичний університет) is a private higher education institution in Ukraine at IV level of accreditation, founded in 1993 under the Academy of Sciences as Kiev Institute \"Slavic University\".", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "On 9 November 1993, the constituent meeting of the founding members of the non-governmental organization Kiev Slavic University was held in the premises of the Presidium of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. The collective members of the organization were: the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, the Drahomanov State Pedagogical University of Ukraine, the Stock Exchange of Ukraine, the Youth Committee of the Kyiv State Administration, the Main Department of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, the Trade Union Federation of Ukraine, the Moscow Branch of the Prominvestbank of Ukraine, the Topographic and Geological Survey Colleges of Kyiv, the research and production company \"TEP\" and many other public and commercial organizations.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "On November 25, 1993, the Ministry of Justice of Kiev issued a law on the state registration of the Kiev Slavic University (the date of its official foundation).", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The purpose of the university was to train highly qualified specialists in a wide range of fields and specialties and to conduct research on Slavic studies.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "December 30, 1993. The Kiev Slavic University was inaugurated in Kiev. The university was inaugurated by Archimandrite Seraphim. The first lecture for the students of preparatory university education and secondary school students of Kyiv schools was delivered by the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Slovak Republic to Ukraine Robert Harenchar.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "", "title": "References" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
Kiev Slavic University is a private higher education institution in Ukraine at IV level of accreditation, founded in 1993 under the Academy of Sciences as Kiev Institute "Slavic University".
2023-12-07T00:55:48Z
2023-12-25T23:09:16Z
[ "Template:Infobox university", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Coord missing", "Template:Authority control", "Template:Ukraine-university-stub" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyiv_Slavonic_University
75,504,097
Rochelle Hoi-Yiu Kwan
Rochelle Hoi-Yiu Kwan (born circa 1994), is a second-generation Hong Kong American DJ (Yiu Yiu), Oral History Educator, and Cultural Organizer based in New York City (NYC). She is the founder of Chinatown Records and was awarded the 2023 Manhattan Arts Grantee from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs to honor outstanding artists and cultural organizers in NYC. She was born around 1994 and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her parents immigrated to the United States from Hong Kong in the 70's and 80's. Kwan has a sister named Elodie Kwan. In 2015, Kwan graduated Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California, where she studied Women’s Studies, Sociology, and Psychology. After graduating, she moved to Washington D.C to serve on the Case Management Team for the Network for Victim Recovery to advocate for survivors of sexual assault. During this time, she was also a volunteer for the Lutheran Volunteer Corps in D.C. After working at Network for Victim Recovery, Kwan became the Storytelling Team Lead for the nonprofit Think!Chinatown, where she combines oral history, song, and storytelling to create workshops for community members focused on exploring the Asian diaspora. She has led workshops such as “An Ode to Our Generations: Remembering the Music and Memories of Yellow Pearl and Basement Workshop,” which was showcased at Chinatown Arts Week 2021 and on T!C Collections–DCTV Firehouse Cinema. In 2023, Kwan preformed as a DJ in San Francisco for Lunar New Year. Kwan also founded and runs her own record shop in Chinatown called “Chinatown Records.” Chinatown Records focuses on the history of Cantopop, Chinese opera, and Taiwanese pop. Kwan attributed her inspiration for starting Chinatown Records Project to her father, who used to host Cantonese Karaoke parties featuring old traditional music. The record shop currently is home to a number of records, each exploring a different family and their personal connection to the song. On March 13, 2023, Kwan received the 2023 Manhattan Arts Grant from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) to honor outstanding artists and cultural organizations in NYC.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Rochelle Hoi-Yiu Kwan (born circa 1994), is a second-generation Hong Kong American DJ (Yiu Yiu), Oral History Educator, and Cultural Organizer based in New York City (NYC). She is the founder of Chinatown Records and was awarded the 2023 Manhattan Arts Grantee from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs to honor outstanding artists and cultural organizers in NYC.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She was born around 1994 and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her parents immigrated to the United States from Hong Kong in the 70's and 80's. Kwan has a sister named Elodie Kwan.", "title": "Early Life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 2015, Kwan graduated Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California, where she studied Women’s Studies, Sociology, and Psychology.", "title": "Education" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "After graduating, she moved to Washington D.C to serve on the Case Management Team for the Network for Victim Recovery to advocate for survivors of sexual assault. During this time, she was also a volunteer for the Lutheran Volunteer Corps in D.C.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "After working at Network for Victim Recovery, Kwan became the Storytelling Team Lead for the nonprofit Think!Chinatown, where she combines oral history, song, and storytelling to create workshops for community members focused on exploring the Asian diaspora. She has led workshops such as “An Ode to Our Generations: Remembering the Music and Memories of Yellow Pearl and Basement Workshop,” which was showcased at Chinatown Arts Week 2021 and on T!C Collections–DCTV Firehouse Cinema.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2023, Kwan preformed as a DJ in San Francisco for Lunar New Year.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Kwan also founded and runs her own record shop in Chinatown called “Chinatown Records.” Chinatown Records focuses on the history of Cantopop, Chinese opera, and Taiwanese pop. Kwan attributed her inspiration for starting Chinatown Records Project to her father, who used to host Cantonese Karaoke parties featuring old traditional music. The record shop currently is home to a number of records, each exploring a different family and their personal connection to the song.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "On March 13, 2023, Kwan received the 2023 Manhattan Arts Grant from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) to honor outstanding artists and cultural organizations in NYC.", "title": "Career" } ]
Rochelle Hoi-Yiu Kwan, is a second-generation Hong Kong American DJ, Oral History Educator, and Cultural Organizer based in New York City (NYC). She is the founder of Chinatown Records and was awarded the 2023 Manhattan Arts Grantee from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs to honor outstanding artists and cultural organizers in NYC.
2023-12-07T00:55:52Z
2023-12-07T01:41:04Z
[ "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rochelle_Hoi-Yiu_Kwan
75,504,145
Nonformal education
[]
REDIRECT [[Nonformal learning]
2023-12-07T01:04:04Z
2023-12-07T01:04:04Z
[]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonformal_education
75,504,159
2023 Open Angers Arena Loire – Doubles
Alycia Parks and Zhang Shuai were the reigning champions, but did not participate this year.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alycia Parks and Zhang Shuai were the reigning champions, but did not participate this year.", "title": "" } ]
Alycia Parks and Zhang Shuai were the reigning champions, but did not participate this year.
2023-12-07T01:07:09Z
2023-12-10T16:39:00Z
[ "Template:2023 WTA 125 tournaments", "Template:Tennis events", "Template:Main article", "Template:Columns-list", "Template:Draw key", "Template:8TeamBracket-Tennis3-v2", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Open_Angers_Arena_Loire_%E2%80%93_Doubles
75,504,174
Music for 18 Musicians (album)
Music for 18 Musicians is a minimalist album by composer Steve Reich recorded between April–December 1976 and released on the ECM New Series in April 1978—his first of three releases for the label. The ensemble features eighteen musicians, including Reich himself playing the part of piano and marimba, playing Reich's titular composition. The album was recorded shortly after the composition's world premiere at the Town Hall in New York City on April 24, 1976. In a review of the 1978 release, AllMusic wrote that "when this recording was released in 1978, the impact on the new music scene was immediate and overwhelming. Anyone who saw potential in minimalism and had hoped for a major breakthrough piece found it here. The beauty of its pulsing added-note harmonies and the sustained power and precision of the performance were the music's salient features; and instead of the sterile, electronic sound usually associated with minimalism, the music's warm resonance was a welcome change." Reviewing the 1978 LP in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau wrote of Music for 18 Musicians: "In which pulsing modules of high-register acoustic sound—the ensemble comprises violin, cello, clarinet, piano, marimbas, xylophone, metallophone, and women's voices—evolve harmonically toward themselves. Very mathematical, yet also very, well, organic—the duration of particular note-pulses is determined by the natural breath rhythms of the musicians—this sounds great in the evening near the sea." Critic Edward Strickland argues that Music for 18 Musicians is "the high point of ensemble music of the 1970s by composers identified as Minimalist". Ottó Károlyi identifies diverse influences including jazz and Balinese musical forms and notes that the piece's vocals feature organum and conductus. In 2003, David Bowie included it in a list of 25 of his favorite albums, "Confessions of a Vinyl Junkie", calling it "Balinese gamelan music cross-dressing as minimalism". All tracks are written by Steve Reich
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Music for 18 Musicians is a minimalist album by composer Steve Reich recorded between April–December 1976 and released on the ECM New Series in April 1978—his first of three releases for the label. The ensemble features eighteen musicians, including Reich himself playing the part of piano and marimba, playing Reich's titular composition.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The album was recorded shortly after the composition's world premiere at the Town Hall in New York City on April 24, 1976.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In a review of the 1978 release, AllMusic wrote that \"when this recording was released in 1978, the impact on the new music scene was immediate and overwhelming. Anyone who saw potential in minimalism and had hoped for a major breakthrough piece found it here. The beauty of its pulsing added-note harmonies and the sustained power and precision of the performance were the music's salient features; and instead of the sterile, electronic sound usually associated with minimalism, the music's warm resonance was a welcome change.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Reviewing the 1978 LP in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau wrote of Music for 18 Musicians: \"In which pulsing modules of high-register acoustic sound—the ensemble comprises violin, cello, clarinet, piano, marimbas, xylophone, metallophone, and women's voices—evolve harmonically toward themselves. Very mathematical, yet also very, well, organic—the duration of particular note-pulses is determined by the natural breath rhythms of the musicians—this sounds great in the evening near the sea.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Critic Edward Strickland argues that Music for 18 Musicians is \"the high point of ensemble music of the 1970s by composers identified as Minimalist\".", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Ottó Károlyi identifies diverse influences including jazz and Balinese musical forms and notes that the piece's vocals feature organum and conductus.", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 2003, David Bowie included it in a list of 25 of his favorite albums, \"Confessions of a Vinyl Junkie\", calling it \"Balinese gamelan music cross-dressing as minimalism\".", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "All tracks are written by Steve Reich", "title": "Track listing" } ]
Music for 18 Musicians is a minimalist album by composer Steve Reich recorded between April–December 1976 and released on the ECM New Series in April 1978—his first of three releases for the label. The ensemble features eighteen musicians, including Reich himself playing the part of piano and marimba, playing Reich's titular composition.
2023-12-07T01:12:54Z
2023-12-12T00:55:05Z
[ "Template:Infobox album", "Template:Album reviews", "Template:Track", "Template:Citation", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_for_18_Musicians_(album)
75,504,207
Dwarf round herring
The dwarf round herring (Jenkinsia lamprotaenia) is a marine species of fish of the genus Jenkinsia found in the Western Central Atlantic from Bermuda, Gulf of Mexico south to Tobago. The species is both edible and used as live bait. The dwarf round herring can grow to a recorded maximum length of 7.5 cm (2.9 inches). They live in inshore area of 0 - 50 m depth under water in schools. The fish is greyish-green by colour and feeds on zooplankton.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The dwarf round herring (Jenkinsia lamprotaenia) is a marine species of fish of the genus Jenkinsia found in the Western Central Atlantic from Bermuda, Gulf of Mexico south to Tobago. The species is both edible and used as live bait.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The dwarf round herring can grow to a recorded maximum length of 7.5 cm (2.9 inches). They live in inshore area of 0 - 50 m depth under water in schools. The fish is greyish-green by colour and feeds on zooplankton.", "title": "Description" } ]
The dwarf round herring is a marine species of fish of the genus Jenkinsia found in the Western Central Atlantic from Bermuda, Gulf of Mexico south to Tobago. The species is both edible and used as live bait.
2023-12-07T01:19:23Z
2023-12-07T04:03:28Z
[ "Template:Speciesbox", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_round_herring
75,504,241
Mothers and Monsters
Mothers and Monsters is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Édith Jorisch and released in 2023. An allegory for women's anxieties and fears about motherhood, the film depicts a group of women at a banquet whose babies are delivered to them in heads of cabbage, amid an increasingly strange and surreal environment. The cast includes Dean Brisson, Ines Defosse, Arielle Fournier, Juliette Gariépy, Noémie Lanoix, Mylène Mackay, Sarah Ouimette and Aline Winant. The film premiered at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. It was subsequently screened at the 2023 Festival du nouveau cinéma, where it won the audience award in the national short film competition. The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Mothers and Monsters is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Édith Jorisch and released in 2023. An allegory for women's anxieties and fears about motherhood, the film depicts a group of women at a banquet whose babies are delivered to them in heads of cabbage, amid an increasingly strange and surreal environment.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The cast includes Dean Brisson, Ines Defosse, Arielle Fournier, Juliette Gariépy, Noémie Lanoix, Mylène Mackay, Sarah Ouimette and Aline Winant.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The film premiered at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. It was subsequently screened at the 2023 Festival du nouveau cinéma, where it won the audience award in the national short film competition.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.", "title": "" } ]
Mothers and Monsters is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Édith Jorisch and released in 2023. An allegory for women's anxieties and fears about motherhood, the film depicts a group of women at a banquet whose babies are delivered to them in heads of cabbage, amid an increasingly strange and surreal environment. The cast includes Dean Brisson, Ines Defosse, Arielle Fournier, Juliette Gariépy, Noémie Lanoix, Mylène Mackay, Sarah Ouimette and Aline Winant. The film premiered at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. It was subsequently screened at the 2023 Festival du nouveau cinéma, where it won the audience award in the national short film competition. The film was named to TIFF's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.
2023-12-07T01:25:18Z
2023-12-07T06:01:25Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox film", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Imdb title", "Template:2020s-Canada-film-stub" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mothers_and_Monsters
75,504,247
Constrained Horn clauses
Constrained Horn clauses (CHCs) are a fragment of first-order logic with applications to program verification and synthesis. Constrained Horn clauses can be seen as a form of constraint logic programming. A constrained Horn clause is a formula of the form ϕ ∧ P 1 ( x 1 ) ∧ … ∧ P n ( x n ) → P ( x ) {\displaystyle \phi \land P_{1}(\mathbf {x} _{1})\land \ldots \land P_{n}(\mathbf {x_{n}} )\to P(\mathbf {x} )} where ϕ {\displaystyle \phi } is a constraint in some first-order theory, P i {\displaystyle P_{i}} are predicates, and x i {\displaystyle \mathbf {x} _{i}} are universally-quantified variables. The satisfiability of constrained Horn clauses with constraints from linear integer arithmetic is undecidable. There are several automated solvers for CHCs, including the SPACER engine of Z3. CHC-COMP is an annual competition of CHC solvers. CHC-COMP has run every year since 2018. Constrained Horn clauses are a convenient language in which to specify problems in program verification. The SeaHorn verifier for LLVM represents verification conditions as constrained Horn clauses, as does the JayHorn verifier for Java.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Constrained Horn clauses (CHCs) are a fragment of first-order logic with applications to program verification and synthesis. Constrained Horn clauses can be seen as a form of constraint logic programming.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "A constrained Horn clause is a formula of the form", "title": "Definition" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "ϕ ∧ P 1 ( x 1 ) ∧ … ∧ P n ( x n ) → P ( x ) {\\displaystyle \\phi \\land P_{1}(\\mathbf {x} _{1})\\land \\ldots \\land P_{n}(\\mathbf {x_{n}} )\\to P(\\mathbf {x} )}", "title": "Definition" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "where ϕ {\\displaystyle \\phi } is a constraint in some first-order theory, P i {\\displaystyle P_{i}} are predicates, and x i {\\displaystyle \\mathbf {x} _{i}} are universally-quantified variables.", "title": "Definition" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The satisfiability of constrained Horn clauses with constraints from linear integer arithmetic is undecidable.", "title": "Decidability" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "There are several automated solvers for CHCs, including the SPACER engine of Z3.", "title": "Solvers" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "CHC-COMP is an annual competition of CHC solvers. CHC-COMP has run every year since 2018.", "title": "Solvers" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Constrained Horn clauses are a convenient language in which to specify problems in program verification. The SeaHorn verifier for LLVM represents verification conditions as constrained Horn clauses, as does the JayHorn verifier for Java.", "title": "Applications" } ]
Constrained Horn clauses (CHCs) are a fragment of first-order logic with applications to program verification and synthesis. Constrained Horn clauses can be seen as a form of constraint logic programming.
2023-12-07T01:26:11Z
2023-12-11T14:05:17Z
[ "Template:Citation", "Template:Short description", "Template:Missing information", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constrained_Horn_clauses
75,504,261
Doris (given name)
Doris is a predominantly feminine given name of Greek origin meaning Dorian woman. The name of the ethnic group is said to be derived from the name of the mythical founder Dorus, taken from Greek dōron, meaning gift. Doris was a sea goddess, wife of Nereus and mother of the Nereids in Greek mythology. As a feminine name, Doris was most popular in the Anglosphere in the late 19th century and early 20th century. It has also been particularly well used in German-speaking countries. The name is also in rare use as a male name. Doris and its spelling variant Dorris is also in use as a surname with different origins than the female given name.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Doris is a predominantly feminine given name of Greek origin meaning Dorian woman. The name of the ethnic group is said to be derived from the name of the mythical founder Dorus, taken from Greek dōron, meaning gift. Doris was a sea goddess, wife of Nereus and mother of the Nereids in Greek mythology.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "As a feminine name, Doris was most popular in the Anglosphere in the late 19th century and early 20th century. It has also been particularly well used in German-speaking countries. The name is also in rare use as a male name. Doris and its spelling variant Dorris is also in use as a surname with different origins than the female given name.", "title": "Usage" } ]
Doris is a predominantly feminine given name of Greek origin meaning Dorian woman. The name of the ethnic group is said to be derived from the name of the mythical founder Dorus, taken from Greek dōron, meaning gift. Doris was a sea goddess, wife of Nereus and mother of the Nereids in Greek mythology.
2023-12-07T01:31:46Z
2023-12-17T03:26:20Z
[ "Template:Infobox given name", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Given name", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Other uses" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doris_(given_name)
75,504,264
Innovasport and Innvictus
Grupo Innovasport operates, as of November 2023, 200 activewear and sporting goods stores and superstores across Mexico. 114 were branded Innovasport, 75 Innvictus and 13 Over Time. The target market of Innvictus are sneakerheads, i.e. fans of sneakers with a focus on tennis shoes, accessories and urban casual wear, categories that have grown exponentially in recent years. Innvictus stores offer exclusive footwear from brands such as Jordan, Nike, Adidas, Puma, etc., and special events such as sneaker trading days. Francisco Martín Borque was a Spanish immigrant to Mexico and co-founded the Torreón-based Soriana chain of hypermarkets together with his brother Armando. Francisco Martín Bringas and his wife María Concepción Villar Manrique launched Innovasport in April 1999 in the Contry neighborhood of the much larger city of Monterrey, the core city of Mexico's third-largest metropolitan area. Innvictus was launched in April 2015 with its first store in the Galerías Monterrey shopping mall, also in Monterrey. In 2011 Grupo Innovasport opened the largest sports and activewear store in Mexico, at 2,870 m (30,900 sq ft). The ownership is split between: Analysts have noted that sneakers became very popular in Mexico in the decades up to the 2020s. What was once a simple sports shoe became a fashion and cultural phenomenon in Mexico, something that Innvictus took advantage of and monetized. According to Euromonitor International, the Mexican shoe market experienced double-digit growth during the COVID-19 pandemic, driven mainly by the sale of sneakers. A few days before the NBA Mexico City Game on November 9, 2023, the National Basketball Association announced a multi-year partnership with InnovaSport to fully enter the Mexican market, offering fans the widest selection of authentic NBA merchandise ever available in Mexico. This was to be both by NBA stores operated by Innovasport, as well as a dedicated NBA e-commerce website for Mexico, nbatienda.com. NBAtienda.com features:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Grupo Innovasport operates, as of November 2023, 200 activewear and sporting goods stores and superstores across Mexico. 114 were branded Innovasport, 75 Innvictus and 13 Over Time.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The target market of Innvictus are sneakerheads, i.e. fans of sneakers with a focus on tennis shoes, accessories and urban casual wear, categories that have grown exponentially in recent years. Innvictus stores offer exclusive footwear from brands such as Jordan, Nike, Adidas, Puma, etc., and special events such as sneaker trading days.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Francisco Martín Borque was a Spanish immigrant to Mexico and co-founded the Torreón-based Soriana chain of hypermarkets together with his brother Armando. Francisco Martín Bringas and his wife María Concepción Villar Manrique launched Innovasport in April 1999 in the Contry neighborhood of the much larger city of Monterrey, the core city of Mexico's third-largest metropolitan area. Innvictus was launched in April 2015 with its first store in the Galerías Monterrey shopping mall, also in Monterrey.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 2011 Grupo Innovasport opened the largest sports and activewear store in Mexico, at 2,870 m (30,900 sq ft).", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The ownership is split between:", "title": "Ownership" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Analysts have noted that sneakers became very popular in Mexico in the decades up to the 2020s. What was once a simple sports shoe became a fashion and cultural phenomenon in Mexico, something that Innvictus took advantage of and monetized.", "title": "Product lines" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "According to Euromonitor International, the Mexican shoe market experienced double-digit growth during the COVID-19 pandemic, driven mainly by the sale of sneakers.", "title": "Product lines" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "", "title": "Partnerships" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "A few days before the NBA Mexico City Game on November 9, 2023, the National Basketball Association announced a multi-year partnership with InnovaSport to fully enter the Mexican market, offering fans the widest selection of authentic NBA merchandise ever available in Mexico. This was to be both by NBA stores operated by Innovasport, as well as a dedicated NBA e-commerce website for Mexico, nbatienda.com.", "title": "Partnerships" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "NBAtienda.com features:", "title": "Partnerships" } ]
Grupo Innovasport operates, as of November 2023, 200 activewear and sporting goods stores and superstores across Mexico. 114 were branded Innovasport, 75 Innvictus and 13 Over Time. The target market of Innvictus are sneakerheads, i.e. fans of sneakers with a focus on tennis shoes, accessories and urban casual wear, categories that have grown exponentially in recent years. Innvictus stores offer exclusive footwear from brands such as Jordan, Nike, Adidas, Puma, etc., and special events such as sneaker trading days.
2023-12-07T01:32:26Z
2023-12-07T03:23:55Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cvt", "Template:Anchor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innovasport_and_Innvictus
75,504,322
Danon
Danon may refer to
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Danon may refer to", "title": "" } ]
Danon may refer to Danon Fantasy Danon Kingly Danon Platina Danon Premium Danon Scorpion Danon Smash Danon The Kid Danon (surname) Danon disease
2023-12-07T01:43:18Z
2023-12-07T01:43:18Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danon
75,504,323
Danon (surname)
Danon or Danón (Hebrew: דנון) is the surname of the following notable people:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Danon or Danón (Hebrew: דנון) is the surname of the following notable people:", "title": "" } ]
Danon or Danón is the surname of the following notable people: Abraham Danon (1857–1925), Turkish rabbi, Hebraist, writer, and poet Ambra Danon, Italian costume designer Danny Danon, Israeli politician and former diplomat David Danon (1921–2015), Israeli physician and scientist Éric Danon, French diplomat Joseph ibn Danon, 17th century Hebraist and Talmudist Laurence Danon, French businesswoman Meir Benjamin Menahem Danon (1770–1854), rabbinical writer Nisan Danon, Israeli football player Oskar Danon (1913–2009), Yugoslav composer and conductor Pierre Danon, French entrepreneur Raymond Danon (1930–2018), French film producer Vitalis Danon (1897–1969), Jewish-Tunisian writer Yaco Danón, Argentine football player Yael Danon, Israeli-Panamanian singer Yehuda Danon, Surgeon General of the Israel Defense Forces Yom-Tov Danon, Jewish rabbi and author
2023-12-07T01:43:24Z
2023-12-07T01:43:24Z
[ "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danon_(surname)
75,504,342
Penelope Tsernoglou
Penelope Tsernoglou is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 75th district in the 2022 election.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Penelope Tsernoglou is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 75th district in the 2022 election.", "title": "" } ]
Penelope Tsernoglou is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 75th district in the 2022 election.
2023-12-07T01:47:38Z
2023-12-07T21:39:53Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox officeholder", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Ballotpedia", "Template:Michigan House of Representatives", "Template:Michigan-politician-stub" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope_Tsernoglou
75,504,345
God Will Forgive
God Will Forgive (Ukrainian: Бог простить) is a Ukrainian short drama film directed by Hovhannes Khachatryan. The Ukrainian State Film Agency gives the following description of the film: "A Ukrainian priest, a chaplain, trying to get out of the grey zone, comes across a separatist convoy that has been shelled, where he meets a mortally wounded mercenary and is faced with a choice – to help or to keep running, but suddenly he accidentally steps on an anti-personnel mine." On 9 July 2020, the short film God Will Forgive was one of the winners of the 13th Ukrainian State Film Council pitch and received funding after a vote by the State Council for the Support of Cinematography, and was also included in the selection of the 6 most interesting debut short film projects in the 13th Ukrainian State Film Council pitch. On 8 November 2020, the Art Centre of Odesa Film Studio organised an award ceremony for the participants of the short film project Kira Muratova Short Encounters, where the script for God Will Forgive came second and received funding for the film project. The film stars Viktor Zhdanov, who has also appeared in the films Cyborgs, Ex, Volcano, Zachar Berkut and other Ukrainian films and TV series. The film was shot by TUARON with the help of the Ukrainian National Guard, which provided equipment and personnel. The film was produced by Mila Andriiash, Olga Klymenko and Swedish film producer Anton Sova. The film reveals the acute problem of mined areas and was screened at international film festivals in Spain, Ukraine, Germany, US and Sweden.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "God Will Forgive (Ukrainian: Бог простить) is a Ukrainian short drama film directed by Hovhannes Khachatryan.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The Ukrainian State Film Agency gives the following description of the film: \"A Ukrainian priest, a chaplain, trying to get out of the grey zone, comes across a separatist convoy that has been shelled, where he meets a mortally wounded mercenary and is faced with a choice – to help or to keep running, but suddenly he accidentally steps on an anti-personnel mine.\"", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "On 9 July 2020, the short film God Will Forgive was one of the winners of the 13th Ukrainian State Film Council pitch and received funding after a vote by the State Council for the Support of Cinematography, and was also included in the selection of the 6 most interesting debut short film projects in the 13th Ukrainian State Film Council pitch.", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On 8 November 2020, the Art Centre of Odesa Film Studio organised an award ceremony for the participants of the short film project Kira Muratova Short Encounters, where the script for God Will Forgive came second and received funding for the film project.", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The film stars Viktor Zhdanov, who has also appeared in the films Cyborgs, Ex, Volcano, Zachar Berkut and other Ukrainian films and TV series.", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The film was shot by TUARON with the help of the Ukrainian National Guard, which provided equipment and personnel. The film was produced by Mila Andriiash, Olga Klymenko and Swedish film producer Anton Sova.", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "The film reveals the acute problem of mined areas and was screened at international film festivals in Spain, Ukraine, Germany, US and Sweden.", "title": "Plot" } ]
God Will Forgive is a Ukrainian short drama film directed by Hovhannes Khachatryan.
2023-12-07T01:48:06Z
2023-12-22T16:49:04Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:CinemaofUkraine", "Template:Short description", "Template:Lang-uk", "Template:External media", "Template:Infobox film", "Template:IMDb title", "Template:Official website" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_Will_Forgive
75,504,366
Denise Mentzer
Denise Mentzer is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 61st district in the 2022 election.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Denise Mentzer is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 61st district in the 2022 election.", "title": "" } ]
Denise Mentzer is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 61st district in the 2022 election.
2023-12-07T01:51:51Z
2023-12-07T01:51:51Z
[ "Template:Michigan-politician-stub", "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox officeholder", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Ballotpedia", "Template:Michigan House of Representatives" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denise_Mentzer
75,504,368
List of Malaysian films of 2024
This is a list of Malaysian films produced and released in 2024. Most of these films are produced in the Malay language, but there also a significant number of them that are produced in Tamil, English, and Mandarin
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "This is a list of Malaysian films produced and released in 2024. Most of these films are produced in the Malay language, but there also a significant number of them that are produced in Tamil, English, and Mandarin", "title": "" } ]
This is a list of Malaysian films produced and released in 2024. Most of these films are produced in the Malay language, but there also a significant number of them that are produced in Tamil, English, and Mandarin
2023-12-07T01:52:31Z
2023-12-17T17:58:56Z
[ "Template:Cite web", "Template:Films by country", "Template:2024 films", "Template:Portalbar", "Template:Malaysian film list", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Malaysian_films_of_2024
75,504,382
MQX (disambiguation)
MQX is an operating system. MQX or mqx can also refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "MQX is an operating system.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "MQX or mqx can also refer to:", "title": "" } ]
MQX is an operating system. MQX or mqx can also refer to: Alula Aba Nega Airport, an airport in Mekelle, Ethiopia, by IATA code Meralgram railway station, a train station in Garhwa district, Jharkhand state, India; see Railway stations in Jharkhand Mamuju language, a language spoken in Sulawesi island, Indonesia, by ISO 639 code
2023-12-07T01:54:50Z
2023-12-07T01:54:50Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MQX_(disambiguation)
75,504,393
Feud: Capote vs. The Swans
Feud: Capote vs. The Swans is the second season of the anthology television series Feud created by Ryan Murphy for FX, which debuted in 2017. Directed by Gus Van Sant, Max Winkler, and Jennifer Lynch, it is written by Jon Robin Baitz. The eight-episode season is based on the bestselling book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era by Laurence Leamer. It is expected to premiere its first two episodes on January 31, 2024 with each episode available on Hulu the day after broadcast. Acclaimed writer Truman Capote betrays his relationships with members of New York high society by writing thinly-veiled accounts of their personal lives. FX renewed the Feud series for a second season in February 2017, with Ryan Murphy and Jon Robin Baitz attached as writers, with an initial focus on the relationship between King Charles III and the late Princess Diana. By April 2022, the focus had shifted onto Truman Capote and his tempestuous relationship with New York high society with Gus Van Sant on board to direct and Naomi Watts attached to star. Baitz adapted the bestselling book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era by Laurence Leamer for the series. Executive producers on the series include Murphy, Alexis Martin Woodall, Baitz, Van Sant, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Watts, Eric Kovtun, and Scott Robertson. It was the last project of Treat Williams before his death in 2023. In August 2022, Tom Hollander was cast as Truman Capote with the cast also including Diane Lane and Calista Flockhart. In September 2022, Demi Moore joined the cast. Filming began in New York in the autumn of 2022. The season is expected to premiere its first two episodes on January 31, 2024, with all episodes available on Hulu the following day. In many international territories the series is going to be available on Disney+ (via Star) and in Latin America the series is going to be available on Star+.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Feud: Capote vs. The Swans is the second season of the anthology television series Feud created by Ryan Murphy for FX, which debuted in 2017. Directed by Gus Van Sant, Max Winkler, and Jennifer Lynch, it is written by Jon Robin Baitz. The eight-episode season is based on the bestselling book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era by Laurence Leamer. It is expected to premiere its first two episodes on January 31, 2024 with each episode available on Hulu the day after broadcast.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Acclaimed writer Truman Capote betrays his relationships with members of New York high society by writing thinly-veiled accounts of their personal lives.", "title": "Premise" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "FX renewed the Feud series for a second season in February 2017, with Ryan Murphy and Jon Robin Baitz attached as writers, with an initial focus on the relationship between King Charles III and the late Princess Diana.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "By April 2022, the focus had shifted onto Truman Capote and his tempestuous relationship with New York high society with Gus Van Sant on board to direct and Naomi Watts attached to star.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Baitz adapted the bestselling book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era by Laurence Leamer for the series. Executive producers on the series include Murphy, Alexis Martin Woodall, Baitz, Van Sant, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Watts, Eric Kovtun, and Scott Robertson.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "It was the last project of Treat Williams before his death in 2023.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In August 2022, Tom Hollander was cast as Truman Capote with the cast also including Diane Lane and Calista Flockhart. In September 2022, Demi Moore joined the cast.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Filming began in New York in the autumn of 2022.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "The season is expected to premiere its first two episodes on January 31, 2024, with all episodes available on Hulu the following day. In many international territories the series is going to be available on Disney+ (via Star) and in Latin America the series is going to be available on Star+.", "title": "Broadcast" } ]
Feud: Capote vs. The Swans is the second season of the anthology television series Feud created by Ryan Murphy for FX, which debuted in 2017. Directed by Gus Van Sant, Max Winkler, and Jennifer Lynch, it is written by Jon Robin Baitz. The eight-episode season is based on the bestselling book Capote's Women: A True Story of Love, Betrayal, and a Swan Song for an Era by Laurence Leamer. It is expected to premiere its first two episodes on January 31, 2024 with each episode available on Hulu the day after broadcast.
2023-12-07T01:57:16Z
2023-12-30T07:06:00Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feud:_Capote_vs._The_Swans
75,504,396
Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto
Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto (born 1999) is an Indonesian film director. She is most noted for her short film Sawo Matang, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2023. She made a number of student films prior to debuting her short film Srikandi at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival. Later the same year she released Brown Enough, a short documentary film co-directed with Kent Donguines. In 2022 she released Shallots and Garlic (Bawang Merah Bawang Putih), which utilized the body horror genre to tell a story about a young woman with an eating disorder.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto (born 1999) is an Indonesian film director. She is most noted for her short film Sawo Matang, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She made a number of student films prior to debuting her short film Srikandi at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival. Later the same year she released Brown Enough, a short documentary film co-directed with Kent Donguines.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 2022 she released Shallots and Garlic (Bawang Merah Bawang Putih), which utilized the body horror genre to tell a story about a young woman with an eating disorder.", "title": "" } ]
Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto is an Indonesian film director. She is most noted for her short film Sawo Matang, which was named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2023. She made a number of student films prior to debuting her short film Srikandi at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival. Later the same year she released Brown Enough, a short documentary film co-directed with Kent Donguines. In 2022 she released Shallots and Garlic, which utilized the body horror genre to tell a story about a young woman with an eating disorder.
2023-12-07T01:58:00Z
2023-12-15T23:08:29Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Imdb name", "Template:Official" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrea_Nirmala_Widjajanto
75,504,411
Staff god
Staff gods (or atua rakau) are sacred objects within the cultural and spiritual practices of the Cook Islands Māori, particularly prominent on the island of Rarotonga. These objects were crafted from wood and adorned with intricate carvings and symbolic designs, combining images of gods with their human descendants. The staffs range in length between 28 inches (71 cm) and 18 feet (5.5 m) and were carried and displayed horizontally. At one end there, staff gods might have a schematized blade-shaped head and arms of the progenitive god with a succession of little figures rising from his body, alternatively full-face and in profile with penis erect. The staff itself terminated in a phallus. But this elaborately carved sexual imagery had less importance for the Rarotongans than the feathers and pieces of shell representing the soul of the god and enclosed in yards of bark cloth (tapa) wound around the center of the staff. During the 19th century, the arrival of the missionaries from Europe to the Cook Islands saw the burning of staff gods to make way for Christianity. Some missionaries reported seeing a staff god as large as 6 metres long. British Museum has the only surviving staff god with full bark cloth (tapa) intact that predates the arrival of European missionaries. The central wooden staff consists of a large Tangaroa and smaller male and female figures on one side, and on the other side, a naturalistic penis, is missing. Staff gods without the bark cloth wrappings can be found all over the world. Such as Metropolitan Museum of Art, Israel Museum, and Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. In 2014, one Rarotongan staff god was auctioned for 1.2 million euros in Paris. Nina Oberg Humphries is a contemporary New Zealand and Cook Islands artist who recreates contemporary versions of ancient Rarotongan staff gods to tell stories of the Cook Islands diasporas in New Zealand.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Staff gods (or atua rakau) are sacred objects within the cultural and spiritual practices of the Cook Islands Māori, particularly prominent on the island of Rarotonga. These objects were crafted from wood and adorned with intricate carvings and symbolic designs, combining images of gods with their human descendants. The staffs range in length between 28 inches (71 cm) and 18 feet (5.5 m) and were carried and displayed horizontally.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "At one end there, staff gods might have a schematized blade-shaped head and arms of the progenitive god with a succession of little figures rising from his body, alternatively full-face and in profile with penis erect. The staff itself terminated in a phallus. But this elaborately carved sexual imagery had less importance for the Rarotongans than the feathers and pieces of shell representing the soul of the god and enclosed in yards of bark cloth (tapa) wound around the center of the staff.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "During the 19th century, the arrival of the missionaries from Europe to the Cook Islands saw the burning of staff gods to make way for Christianity. Some missionaries reported seeing a staff god as large as 6 metres long.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "British Museum has the only surviving staff god with full bark cloth (tapa) intact that predates the arrival of European missionaries. The central wooden staff consists of a large Tangaroa and smaller male and female figures on one side, and on the other side, a naturalistic penis, is missing.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Staff gods without the bark cloth wrappings can be found all over the world. Such as Metropolitan Museum of Art, Israel Museum, and Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2014, one Rarotongan staff god was auctioned for 1.2 million euros in Paris.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Nina Oberg Humphries is a contemporary New Zealand and Cook Islands artist who recreates contemporary versions of ancient Rarotongan staff gods to tell stories of the Cook Islands diasporas in New Zealand.", "title": "Present" } ]
Staff gods are sacred objects within the cultural and spiritual practices of the Cook Islands Māori, particularly prominent on the island of Rarotonga. These objects were crafted from wood and adorned with intricate carvings and symbolic designs, combining images of gods with their human descendants. The staffs range in length between 28 inches (71 cm) and 18 feet and were carried and displayed horizontally. At one end there, staff gods might have a schematized blade-shaped head and arms of the progenitive god with a succession of little figures rising from his body, alternatively full-face and in profile with penis erect. The staff itself terminated in a phallus. But this elaborately carved sexual imagery had less importance for the Rarotongans than the feathers and pieces of shell representing the soul of the god and enclosed in yards of bark cloth (tapa) wound around the center of the staff.
2023-12-07T02:01:19Z
2023-12-28T19:15:05Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Distinguish", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staff_god
75,504,413
Ileen Sheppard Gallagher
Ileen Gallagher is an exhibition designer, curator, and project manager. She is known for her creation of the Rolling Stones Exhibitionismexhibit and the Jean-Michel Basquiat: King Pleasure exhibit, which opened in 2022. She first worked as a curator for the De Young Museum in San Francisco, the Queens Museum of Art in New York City, the Library of Congress in Washington DC, and the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. She then originated the collection the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1999, she started her own company, ISG Productions, creating exhibitions for The Walt Disney Museum in San Francisco and Harley-Davidson Headquarters in Milwaukee. She taught for 12 years in the graduate museum studies program at New York University. In 2022, she created an exhibit for the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Ileen Gallagher is an exhibition designer, curator, and project manager. She is known for her creation of the Rolling Stones Exhibitionismexhibit and the Jean-Michel Basquiat: King Pleasure exhibit, which opened in 2022.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She first worked as a curator for the De Young Museum in San Francisco, the Queens Museum of Art in New York City, the Library of Congress in Washington DC, and the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. She then originated the collection the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1999, she started her own company, ISG Productions, creating exhibitions for The Walt Disney Museum in San Francisco and Harley-Davidson Headquarters in Milwaukee. She taught for 12 years in the graduate museum studies program at New York University. In 2022, she created an exhibit for the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU.", "title": "" } ]
Ileen Gallagher is an exhibition designer, curator, and project manager. She is known for her creation of the Rolling Stones Exhibitionismexhibit and the Jean-Michel Basquiat: King Pleasure exhibit, which opened in 2022. She first worked as a curator for the De Young Museum in San Francisco, the Queens Museum of Art in New York City, the Library of Congress in Washington DC, and the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. She then originated the collection the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1999, she started her own company, ISG Productions, creating exhibitions for The Walt Disney Museum in San Francisco and Harley-Davidson Headquarters in Milwaukee. She taught for 12 years in the graduate museum studies program at New York University. In 2022, she created an exhibit for the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU.
2023-12-07T02:01:39Z
2023-12-11T19:13:34Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ileen_Sheppard_Gallagher
75,504,417
Bolga Ghatel
Bolgatanga Ghatel Ladies, also known as Bolga Ghatel Ladies is a women's football team based in Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region of Ghana. They were one of the 16 teams to play in the maiden edition of the Ghana Women's Premier League in 2012.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Bolgatanga Ghatel Ladies, also known as Bolga Ghatel Ladies is a women's football team based in Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region of Ghana. They were one of the 16 teams to play in the maiden edition of the Ghana Women's Premier League in 2012.", "title": "" } ]
Bolgatanga Ghatel Ladies, also known as Bolga Ghatel Ladies is a women's football team based in Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region of Ghana. They were one of the 16 teams to play in the maiden edition of the Ghana Women's Premier League in 2012.
2023-12-07T02:02:26Z
2023-12-26T13:51:35Z
[ "Template:Ghana-footyclub-stub", "Template:Infobox football club", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolga_Ghatel
75,504,419
Mary Balzer Buskirk
Mary Balzer Buskirk (1931 – 2009) was an American textile artist known for being part of the Mid-century modern movement creating fiber art outside the applied textile tradition. Buskirk was born on March 11, 1931 in Mountain Lake, Minnesota. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Carleton College and her Master of Fine Arts from the Cranbrook Academy of Art. In 2001 the Monterey Museum of Art held a retrospective entitled The Fabric of Experience: the woven art of Mary Balzer Buskirk. Buskirk died in Monterey, California on May 11, 2009. Her work is in the collection of the Monterey Museum of Art and the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Mary Balzer Buskirk (1931 – 2009) was an American textile artist known for being part of the Mid-century modern movement creating fiber art outside the applied textile tradition.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Buskirk was born on March 11, 1931 in Mountain Lake, Minnesota. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Carleton College and her Master of Fine Arts from the Cranbrook Academy of Art. In 2001 the Monterey Museum of Art held a retrospective entitled The Fabric of Experience: the woven art of Mary Balzer Buskirk.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Buskirk died in Monterey, California on May 11, 2009. Her work is in the collection of the Monterey Museum of Art and the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles.", "title": "" } ]
Mary Balzer Buskirk was an American textile artist known for being part of the Mid-century modern movement creating fiber art outside the applied textile tradition. Buskirk was born on March 11, 1931 in Mountain Lake, Minnesota. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Carleton College and her Master of Fine Arts from the Cranbrook Academy of Art. In 2001 the Monterey Museum of Art held a retrospective entitled The Fabric of Experience: the woven art of Mary Balzer Buskirk. Buskirk died in Monterey, California on May 11, 2009. Her work is in the collection of the Monterey Museum of Art and the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles.
2023-12-07T02:03:23Z
2023-12-13T00:26:50Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Balzer_Buskirk
75,504,421
Upper Silver Creek (Coyote Creek tributary)
Upper Silver Creek is a 8.3-mile-long (13.4 km) northwestward-flowing stream originating in the Edenvale Hills in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It was diverted for flood control due west where it is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Historically, Silver Creek was known as Arroyo de Socayre and ran through the Rancho Socayre. Silver Creek was probably named for its silvery appearance, although the word "silver" may have been used to indicate nearby quicksilver (mercury ore) deposits. The creek currently drains an area of over 6 square miles (16 km) with its source in the Edenvalle Hills of southeast San Jose, California. Upper Silver Creek and Thompson Creek both begin in the Edenvale Hills, and historically sank into the alluvial basin of Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose. Then they resurfaced and flowed into a large freshwater marsh known historically as Laguna Socayre, and referred to more recently as Silver Creek Marsh. In 1978, Silver Creek Marsh was excavated into a flood water detention pond or reservoir, now known as Lake Cunningham. Thus, Lower Silver Creek used to begin southwest of where Lake Cunningham is today, but now its source is regarded as just north of this artificial lake by the Santa Clara Valley Water District, now known as Valley Water. In the 1970s, Upper Silver Creek flows were shunted due west into a flood control channel discharging directly to Coyote Creek south of Singleton Road. In 1962 Upper Silver Creek was reported as an historical migration route and habitat for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). However, in July 1975, California Department of Fish & Game visually surveyed Upper Silver Creek between the U.S. Highway 101 bridge and the headwaters. The survey reportnoted an impassable culvert in the lower reach that was suspected of precluding use by salmonids.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Upper Silver Creek is a 8.3-mile-long (13.4 km) northwestward-flowing stream originating in the Edenvale Hills in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It was diverted for flood control due west where it is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Historically, Silver Creek was known as Arroyo de Socayre and ran through the Rancho Socayre. Silver Creek was probably named for its silvery appearance, although the word \"silver\" may have been used to indicate nearby quicksilver (mercury ore) deposits.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The creek currently drains an area of over 6 square miles (16 km) with its source in the Edenvalle Hills of southeast San Jose, California. Upper Silver Creek and Thompson Creek both begin in the Edenvale Hills, and historically sank into the alluvial basin of Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose. Then they resurfaced and flowed into a large freshwater marsh known historically as Laguna Socayre, and referred to more recently as Silver Creek Marsh. In 1978, Silver Creek Marsh was excavated into a flood water detention pond or reservoir, now known as Lake Cunningham. Thus, Lower Silver Creek used to begin southwest of where Lake Cunningham is today, but now its source is regarded as just north of this artificial lake by the Santa Clara Valley Water District, now known as Valley Water. In the 1970s, Upper Silver Creek flows were shunted due west into a flood control channel discharging directly to Coyote Creek south of Singleton Road.", "title": "Watershed and Course" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 1962 Upper Silver Creek was reported as an historical migration route and habitat for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). However, in July 1975, California Department of Fish & Game visually surveyed Upper Silver Creek between the U.S. Highway 101 bridge and the headwaters. The survey reportnoted an impassable culvert in the lower reach that was suspected of precluding use by salmonids.", "title": "Ecology and Conservation" } ]
Upper Silver Creek is a 8.3-mile-long (13.4 km) northwestward-flowing stream originating in the Edenvale Hills in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It was diverted for flood control due west where it is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
2023-12-07T02:04:00Z
2023-12-08T04:37:53Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Silver_Creek_(Coyote_Creek_tributary)
75,504,425
Winter Is Coming (2023)
The 2023 Winter Is Coming was the fourth annual Winter Is Coming professional wrestling television special produced by All Elite Wrestling (AEW). The event took place on December 13 and 16, 2023. While the prior three events only aired as a special episode of Wednesday Night Dynamite, the 2023 event expanded Winter Is Coming to a three-part special, also encompassing Friday Night Rampage and Saturday Night Collision. Dynamite aired live on December 13 on TBS and was held at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas, while Rampage was taped that same night and aired on tape delay on December 15 on TNT. Collision aired live on December 16 on TNT and was held at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, the same location as the 2021 and 2022 events. A total of 17 matches were contested across the three broadcasts; six aired live on Dynamite with four taped for Rampage, and then seven aired live on Collision. In the main event of the Dynamite broadcast, Jon Moxley defeated Swerve Strickland in a Gold League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament. The event also saw a special appearance by members of the Von Erich family (Kevin and his sons Marshall and Ross), with Marshall and Ross having their AEW debut match on the Rampage broadcast. In the main event of the Rampage broadcast, Top Flight (Dante Martin and Darius Martin) and Action Andretti defeated Komander, El Hijo del Vikingo, and Penta El Zero Miedo. In the main event of the Collision broadcast, Bryan Danielson defeated Brody King in a Blue League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament. Winter Is Coming is an annual professional wrestling television special held in December by All Elite Wrestling (AEW) since 2020. The title "Winter Is Coming" is derived from Game of Thrones, a television series from HBO, which is part of Warner Bros. Discovery, which also includes AEW broadcast partners TBS and TNT. On October 4, 2023, it was originally announced that the fourth Winter Is Coming would be held on December 13, 2023, at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas. From 2020 to 2022, Winter Is Coming only aired as a special episode of Wednesday Night Dynamite. For the 2023 event, it was expanded to a three-part special, also encompassing Friday Night Rampage and Saturday Night Collision. Dynamite aired live on TBS on December 13 with Rampage taped that same night and aired on tape delay on December 15 on TNT. Collision aired live on December 16 on TNT and was held at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, the location of the prior two Winter Is Coming events. During the December 6 episode of Dynamite, it was announced that Kevin Von Erich and his sons Marshall and Ross, members of the Von Erich family of professional wrestlers from Texas, would be making a special appearance on the Dynamite broadcast of Winter Is Coming, marking their debut appearance in AEW. This came a week before the US theatrical release of the film, The Iron Claw, a biopic about the Von Erich family. Winter Is Coming featured professional wrestling matches that involved different wrestlers from pre-existing scripted feuds and storylines, written by AEW's writers. Storylines were produced on AEW's weekly television programs, Dynamite, Collision, and Rampage.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2023 Winter Is Coming was the fourth annual Winter Is Coming professional wrestling television special produced by All Elite Wrestling (AEW). The event took place on December 13 and 16, 2023. While the prior three events only aired as a special episode of Wednesday Night Dynamite, the 2023 event expanded Winter Is Coming to a three-part special, also encompassing Friday Night Rampage and Saturday Night Collision. Dynamite aired live on December 13 on TBS and was held at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas, while Rampage was taped that same night and aired on tape delay on December 15 on TNT. Collision aired live on December 16 on TNT and was held at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, the same location as the 2021 and 2022 events.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "A total of 17 matches were contested across the three broadcasts; six aired live on Dynamite with four taped for Rampage, and then seven aired live on Collision. In the main event of the Dynamite broadcast, Jon Moxley defeated Swerve Strickland in a Gold League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament. The event also saw a special appearance by members of the Von Erich family (Kevin and his sons Marshall and Ross), with Marshall and Ross having their AEW debut match on the Rampage broadcast. In the main event of the Rampage broadcast, Top Flight (Dante Martin and Darius Martin) and Action Andretti defeated Komander, El Hijo del Vikingo, and Penta El Zero Miedo. In the main event of the Collision broadcast, Bryan Danielson defeated Brody King in a Blue League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Winter Is Coming is an annual professional wrestling television special held in December by All Elite Wrestling (AEW) since 2020. The title \"Winter Is Coming\" is derived from Game of Thrones, a television series from HBO, which is part of Warner Bros. Discovery, which also includes AEW broadcast partners TBS and TNT.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On October 4, 2023, it was originally announced that the fourth Winter Is Coming would be held on December 13, 2023, at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas. From 2020 to 2022, Winter Is Coming only aired as a special episode of Wednesday Night Dynamite. For the 2023 event, it was expanded to a three-part special, also encompassing Friday Night Rampage and Saturday Night Collision. Dynamite aired live on TBS on December 13 with Rampage taped that same night and aired on tape delay on December 15 on TNT. Collision aired live on December 16 on TNT and was held at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, the location of the prior two Winter Is Coming events.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "During the December 6 episode of Dynamite, it was announced that Kevin Von Erich and his sons Marshall and Ross, members of the Von Erich family of professional wrestlers from Texas, would be making a special appearance on the Dynamite broadcast of Winter Is Coming, marking their debut appearance in AEW. This came a week before the US theatrical release of the film, The Iron Claw, a biopic about the Von Erich family.", "title": "Production" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Winter Is Coming featured professional wrestling matches that involved different wrestlers from pre-existing scripted feuds and storylines, written by AEW's writers. Storylines were produced on AEW's weekly television programs, Dynamite, Collision, and Rampage.", "title": "Production" } ]
The 2023 Winter Is Coming was the fourth annual Winter Is Coming professional wrestling television special produced by All Elite Wrestling (AEW). The event took place on December 13 and 16, 2023. While the prior three events only aired as a special episode of Wednesday Night Dynamite, the 2023 event expanded Winter Is Coming to a three-part special, also encompassing Friday Night Rampage and Saturday Night Collision. Dynamite aired live on December 13 on TBS and was held at the College Park Center in Arlington, Texas, while Rampage was taped that same night and aired on tape delay on December 15 on TNT. Collision aired live on December 16 on TNT and was held at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, the same location as the 2021 and 2022 events. A total of 17 matches were contested across the three broadcasts; six aired live on Dynamite with four taped for Rampage, and then seven aired live on Collision. In the main event of the Dynamite broadcast, Jon Moxley defeated Swerve Strickland in a Gold League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament. The event also saw a special appearance by members of the Von Erich family, with Marshall and Ross having their AEW debut match on the Rampage broadcast. In the main event of the Rampage broadcast, Top Flight and Action Andretti defeated Komander, El Hijo del Vikingo, and Penta El Zero Miedo. In the main event of the Collision broadcast, Bryan Danielson defeated Brody King in a Blue League match of the AEW Continental Classic tournament.
2023-12-07T02:04:50Z
2023-12-26T15:40:03Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_Is_Coming_(2023)
75,504,427
Acayucan Rebellion
The Acayucan Rebellion, also known as the Acayucan Uprising, was a brief uprising in Mexico, within the Acayucan municipality of the Mexican State of Veracruz, lasting from 30 September to 3 October 1906. It was part of a series of uprisings instigated by the Mexican Liberal Party, meant to start a revolt within Mexico against the regime of Porfirio Díaz. Though ultimately unsuccessful in its goal of igniting a revolt, the Acayucan Rebellion and the other uprisings before 1910 were early signs of the instability of the Porfiriato, and precursors to the Mexican Revolution. Since the middle of the 19th century, Veracruz had been one of the primary regions behind the Mexican Industrial Revolution, due to possessing valleys whose rapidly descending rivers made ideal sites for the installation of textile factories, and by 1845, Veracruz, by number of factories and spindles, was the third largest in Mexico. This industrialization was initially driven largely by capital from the Banco de Avio and the community of French investors in Mexico, and later by massive foreign investment expressly encouraged by the Diaz regime as part of their drive to modernize Mexico. This in turn had spurred massive growth in the state, especially during the Porfiriato, which saw the population within the Orizaba valley doubling from 1887 to 1906, and even many smaller towns and communities in the region being home to major industrial facilities in the state. Though this growth had initially been accompanied by large scale growth in the worker's living conditions, which had increased by 15% between 1877 and 1898, conditions had collapsed by the turn of the century, with wages falling back to 1877 levels, by then barely enough to afford a day's worth of food, which, when accompanied by the arbitrary imposition of fines by supervisors, saw many workers unable to provide for their family. Working conditions in the state were, by the standard of the day, not considered overly cruel, but debilitating to laborers, with a fourteen or fifteen-hour workday beginning at five-thirty in the morning in the summer, with only one and a half hours per day allotted for meals. Workers in settlements controlled by textile companies also had to suffer from insufficient schools provided for their children, company policies prohibiting the hosting of friends, and outright criminal behavior, including the employment of child labor, sexual harassment, and coercion. These conditions resulted in the textile industry becoming one of the most strike prone industries throughout the Porfiriato, as well as, following global economic trends that saw a dramatic decline in the price of henequen and cotton during the five years before the Revolution, one of the most militant labor forces in Mexico, creating a large pool of recruits from which the PLM were able to draw membership and sympathizers from within Veracruz The instigating force of the uprising, The Mexican Liberal Party, had been founded a year before the revolts in 1905 and had finalized their program on 1 July 1906, calling for the overthrow of the Diaz regime and enacting of a series of social and economic reforms to the Mexican state, which were considered progressive yet moderate. This ideological range allowed them to appeal to and recruit a wide array of Mexicans, especially among workers, motivated to action against the Diaz regime by either liberal or revolutionary ideals. Ricardo Flores Magon, head of the ruling Junta of the MLP, which had been founded as a result of the politicization and persecution of Magon's newspaper, Regeneracion,had by then managed to settle in St. Louis, and utilized the publication of the party's program to usher in a period of increased growth in party membership, founding an auxiliary junta in Arizona, and many cells, organized around clubs, across Mexico. The Governor of Veracruz during the revolts, Teodoro Dehesa, had been in power since 1892, and during his tenure had proven himself a strong advocate for conciliatory labor policy, having stepped into multiple labor disputes within the state, frequently managing to mediate peaceful settlements between workers and factory owners. This had made him both fairly popular within the state and had earned him the confidence of Diaz, who extended Dehesa a greater degree of autonomy in handling labor in the state than other governors. Dehesa, convinced that taking an intransigent attitude would only result in labor becoming further estranged from the government, chose to pursue policies that sought to co-opt PLM associated organizations, as well as ignoring orders from Diaz to perform mass arrests and surveillance of figures in the workers' movements, allowed for the PLM to propagandize and recruit to a greater degree in Veracruz than they were able to do in other non-border states, making Veracruz an important point in their planned revolution. By the summer of 1906, it was widely believed that a revolution was imminent, with even many in the United States suspecting an uprising was imminent, especially following the outbreak of a large scale strike in Cananea, which was widely reported in America, with some papers even reporting it as the beginning of a wider revolution, which they reported to be set to begin on 16 September, with speculation on whether the revolution would be led by the St. Louis Junta, or the recently politically exiled General Bernardo Reyes. Though the Junta denied the rumored 16 September start, they made a concerted effort to keep the attention of the American public upon them, in the belief that doing so would prevent the U.S government from attempting to extradite their leadership, or attempt to intervene in the revolution. This in turn kept talk of a potential September revolution in the public sphere, despite fervent denials from officials and government backed reporters in Mexico. Within Veracruz, Hilario C. Salas, one of the best organizers of PLM clubs in Veracruz, and a delegate to the drafting of the PLM program, was chosen to be the overall leader of PLM's main forces in Veracruz, and devised a plan involving three simultaneous assaults upon the settlements of Acayucan, Minatitlan, and Puerto Mexico. He also traveled to the mountains of San Pedro Soteapan, in order to recruit the Indians who lived within them. The Natives, hopeful that the PLM's promised restoration of their former ejidos would prove true, agreed to join Salas' force. By 30 September, Salas had assembled a force of about a thousand men. Though the PLM had several regional headquarters, including Salas' group in Veracruz, the primary source of the revolts strength was meant to be the local clubs, which numbered around 40 by August. As part of the general instructions the St. Louis Junta issued to their cells within Mexico, attempts would be made to supply them with contraband arms from across the border, but cells would largely be expected to arm and supply themselves from the land they were expected to control. this material difficulty, as well as fear for the safety of the members of different cells, saw the PLM adopt a highly isolated structure for their cells in Mexico, with members of one group ignorant of anyone outside their immediate leadership, who in turn reported only to one of five zone chiefs in Mexico, who in turn answered to the Junta or the Junta's special agents. Thus, inter-group coordination was run directly through the Junta, and was thus largely insufficient Despite the isolated structure and largely unprofessional makeup of their cells, the Junta hoped to be able to both recruit a large score of military deserters and members of the public to their cause, believing that the key to achieving this support would be in launching their risings simultaneously, to create both the appearance of greater strength and paralyze the regime's forces. To this end, cells were instructed to remain in wait until receiving a signal, either in the form of a direct date sent by the Junta, or in the form of an event outside the chain of command, in the form of another strike at Cananea, the arrest of any member of the Junta, or another group launching an insurrection. The other major issue facing the Rebellion was the need to acquire weapons, with the primary means by which they had to acquire them before the rising being to borrow money on the promise of a successful revolution. Thus, plans for the seizure of assets in captured towns were drawn up, focusing on seizing the offices and depositories of government officials and favorites of the regime, while leaving the property of neutral foreigners alone. A plan was also devised to requisition funds and supplies from individuals, though cells were instructed to issue a receipt upon doing so, redeemable upon the revolution's triumph. This, alongside the institution of elections and labor reforms in areas they held, and trials of captured regime officials, were hoped to sway public opinion to their side. The Diaz regime also made preparations for a potential uprising they feared would be underway, even while publicly emphasizing that no such events could be taking place. The government, utilizing privately hired detectives, raids upon PLM headquarters in Mexico, and cooperation from U.S Postal Service in intercepting the mail of the St. Louis Junta, managed to build an efficient spy network centered on the Junta, and developed a decent idea of the scope of the PLM's planned revolution Though the St. Louis Junta had originally planned to travel to the border to inaugurate the Revolution in September, Magon had grown concerned that the Diaz regime had received warning of an impending action, and wired Salas to instead go into hiding. However, Salas feared that such a delay would see his organization wither away, and believed that a rising would be joined by the rest of the country. Before launching the main assault, Salas had a band sent out on 29 September to cut telephone wires and gather recruits in Pajapan municipality, and later sent them to seize the mail dispatched from Minzapan, and seized money bound for treasury officials in Chinameca, in an attempt to make up for the small number of forces and money they had. Salas' assault upon Acayucan, composed of 200 men, beginning at 11:00 P.M, initially met with great success, but quickly fell apart when Salas' became injured, taking a shot to the abdomen, causing his inexperienced force to panic and carry him off the battlefield in retreat. Though the assaults had meant to be simultaneous, the band who were meant to assault Puerto Mexico, under the command of Roman Marin, did not begin their assault until 3:00 A.M on 1 October, starting with the town of Pajapan. They soon managed to capture the town, arresting most of the authorities, seizing over $200, and installing their own officials in the town. they did not begin to set out for Puerto Mexico until 2:00 P.M, but partway through their march, became concerned about their lack of ammunition after seizing Pajapan, and, though they knew another armed band was awaiting them there, they turned back, and by 3 October had ultimately abandoned Pajapan and retreated into the mountains. The third assault, led by Enrique Novoa, was also delayed until 1 October, though they never managed to engage any government forces, as Novoa, alarmed by government reinforcements, abandoned his planned assault in favor of setting up an ambush, only for most of his force to desert him for his perceived cowardice, forcing Novoa to abandon any attempts at continuing. Several other cells, hearing of the rebellion in Acayucan, also launched assaults. One cell managed to seize the town of Ixhautlan on 1 October, though they were driven off by a force of soldiers under the command of the Jefe Politico of Minatitlan the next day, with some sporadic fighting occuring on the third. More far off risings in the states of Coahuila and Tabasco also struck, though these cells were soon put down by government forces. The final battle of the Acayucan uprising took place on 3 October, when MLP forces who had retreated from the Acayucan assault ambushed the government forces who had followed them. Though at first the Rebels had gained the upper hand, the government forces surrendering and claiming a desire to defect to the revolution. When they led the rebels to the village of San Pedro Soteapan, they soon revealed they had no true desire to defect, and ran through most of the rebels with bayonets, with only a few rebels managing to escape. A major factor behind the defeat of the rebellion was the Cells' lack of money, and subsequent dearth of both ammunition and weapons, as well as possessing only a small force of recruits, meaning they could only launch small assaults before being forced to retreat, and being too cautious with their forces. Immediately after the Rebellion concluded, a period of mass arrests across the state followed for two weeks, with around 200 people sent to the prison of San Juan de Uliia, most without trial. The Diaz regime, taking advantage of damaged telephone wires and subsequent lack of information that had made it out, also sought to spin the rebellion off as a non issue. the Regime utilized the involvement of Indians in the assault to cast the rebellion as simply a case of Indian discontent manifesting as a small thwarted attack, with no greater political motivation or revolutionary implications behind it. Many local American papers, eager to satisfy the curiosity over a potential rebellion, largely printed the government statement verbatim and unaltered as part of the front page story, even reprinting rebukes by Diaz affiliated papers of other local papers questioning the official narrative. Other Papers, further afield who were less attached to the potential significance of the rebellion reported more altered versions of the government line emphasizing the attack, while some who could grasp the political significance simply focused on reporting the core point of the governments story, that the event held no political significance This suppression campaign had the intended effect of downplaying American concerns about potential revolution, seeing an advance on the stock market of both Mexican bonds, and of some American companies that operated in Mexico, following concerns of the potential harm a revolution would have on American business interests. Following his retreat and laid low by his injury, Salas spent the remainder of the year in the hills, and was unable to support the Rio Blanco Strike a few months later. The PLM in Veracruz entered a period of dormancy throughout the next two years. Salas would not return to revolutionary action until he began to support the Anti-Reelctionist campaign and building up arms for what he suspected would be an outbreak of violence. Many of his former followers ultimately joined the forces of the Maderistas when the revolution broke out. Soon after the failed rebellion, Magon organized a meeting of the Junta, however their meeting location had been revealed to the Diaz regime by traitors, who in turn informed U.S authorities, who launched a raid upon the meeting. Though many members of the Junta were arrested, Magon managed to escape, and was soon able to reestablish contact with the rest of the Junta through codes and aliases, and began to rebuild the organization. Following the failure of the rebellions of 1906, the PLM began to drift away from its founding moderate politics to an Anarchist organization with extensive plans for the restructuring of Mexican society. This was partly due to Ricardo Flores Magon blaming the lack of ammunition, which he viewed as the primary cause of the 1906 Revolt's failure, to a lack of financial backing by wealthy Liberals within Mexico. Reforms made in light of the 1906 revolts, were ultimately a mixed bag for future PLM efforts. by 1910, economic reforms, as well as the upsurge in income from Regeneracion, and in contributions following the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, left their cells much better off financially, though they still suffered from a dearth of recruits, with most cells still small in comparison to the regions they were expected to operate in, due in part to the greater organizational and financial systems the Anti-Reelectionists had access to, allowing them to attract a greater number of recruits. Further reforms also ordered revolutionary forces to not put down arms until the triumph of the revolution, which would ultimately be utilized to justify refusing to surrender to the Madero lead Interim Government, feeling that Madero had betrayed the revolution, helping to contribute to the next stage of the Mexican Revolution following Diaz's ouster.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Acayucan Rebellion, also known as the Acayucan Uprising, was a brief uprising in Mexico, within the Acayucan municipality of the Mexican State of Veracruz, lasting from 30 September to 3 October 1906. It was part of a series of uprisings instigated by the Mexican Liberal Party, meant to start a revolt within Mexico against the regime of Porfirio Díaz. Though ultimately unsuccessful in its goal of igniting a revolt, the Acayucan Rebellion and the other uprisings before 1910 were early signs of the instability of the Porfiriato, and precursors to the Mexican Revolution.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Since the middle of the 19th century, Veracruz had been one of the primary regions behind the Mexican Industrial Revolution, due to possessing valleys whose rapidly descending rivers made ideal sites for the installation of textile factories, and by 1845, Veracruz, by number of factories and spindles, was the third largest in Mexico. This industrialization was initially driven largely by capital from the Banco de Avio and the community of French investors in Mexico, and later by massive foreign investment expressly encouraged by the Diaz regime as part of their drive to modernize Mexico.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "This in turn had spurred massive growth in the state, especially during the Porfiriato, which saw the population within the Orizaba valley doubling from 1887 to 1906, and even many smaller towns and communities in the region being home to major industrial facilities in the state. Though this growth had initially been accompanied by large scale growth in the worker's living conditions, which had increased by 15% between 1877 and 1898, conditions had collapsed by the turn of the century, with wages falling back to 1877 levels, by then barely enough to afford a day's worth of food, which, when accompanied by the arbitrary imposition of fines by supervisors, saw many workers unable to provide for their family.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Working conditions in the state were, by the standard of the day, not considered overly cruel, but debilitating to laborers, with a fourteen or fifteen-hour workday beginning at five-thirty in the morning in the summer, with only one and a half hours per day allotted for meals. Workers in settlements controlled by textile companies also had to suffer from insufficient schools provided for their children, company policies prohibiting the hosting of friends, and outright criminal behavior, including the employment of child labor, sexual harassment, and coercion.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "These conditions resulted in the textile industry becoming one of the most strike prone industries throughout the Porfiriato, as well as, following global economic trends that saw a dramatic decline in the price of henequen and cotton during the five years before the Revolution, one of the most militant labor forces in Mexico, creating a large pool of recruits from which the PLM were able to draw membership and sympathizers from within Veracruz", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The instigating force of the uprising, The Mexican Liberal Party, had been founded a year before the revolts in 1905 and had finalized their program on 1 July 1906, calling for the overthrow of the Diaz regime and enacting of a series of social and economic reforms to the Mexican state, which were considered progressive yet moderate. This ideological range allowed them to appeal to and recruit a wide array of Mexicans, especially among workers, motivated to action against the Diaz regime by either liberal or revolutionary ideals.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Ricardo Flores Magon, head of the ruling Junta of the MLP, which had been founded as a result of the politicization and persecution of Magon's newspaper, Regeneracion,had by then managed to settle in St. Louis, and utilized the publication of the party's program to usher in a period of increased growth in party membership, founding an auxiliary junta in Arizona, and many cells, organized around clubs, across Mexico.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "The Governor of Veracruz during the revolts, Teodoro Dehesa, had been in power since 1892, and during his tenure had proven himself a strong advocate for conciliatory labor policy, having stepped into multiple labor disputes within the state, frequently managing to mediate peaceful settlements between workers and factory owners. This had made him both fairly popular within the state and had earned him the confidence of Diaz, who extended Dehesa a greater degree of autonomy in handling labor in the state than other governors. Dehesa, convinced that taking an intransigent attitude would only result in labor becoming further estranged from the government, chose to pursue policies that sought to co-opt PLM associated organizations, as well as ignoring orders from Diaz to perform mass arrests and surveillance of figures in the workers' movements, allowed for the PLM to propagandize and recruit to a greater degree in Veracruz than they were able to do in other non-border states, making Veracruz an important point in their planned revolution.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "By the summer of 1906, it was widely believed that a revolution was imminent, with even many in the United States suspecting an uprising was imminent, especially following the outbreak of a large scale strike in Cananea, which was widely reported in America, with some papers even reporting it as the beginning of a wider revolution, which they reported to be set to begin on 16 September, with speculation on whether the revolution would be led by the St. Louis Junta, or the recently politically exiled General Bernardo Reyes.", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "Though the Junta denied the rumored 16 September start, they made a concerted effort to keep the attention of the American public upon them, in the belief that doing so would prevent the U.S government from attempting to extradite their leadership, or attempt to intervene in the revolution. This in turn kept talk of a potential September revolution in the public sphere, despite fervent denials from officials and government backed reporters in Mexico.", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "Within Veracruz, Hilario C. Salas, one of the best organizers of PLM clubs in Veracruz, and a delegate to the drafting of the PLM program, was chosen to be the overall leader of PLM's main forces in Veracruz, and devised a plan involving three simultaneous assaults upon the settlements of Acayucan, Minatitlan, and Puerto Mexico. He also traveled to the mountains of San Pedro Soteapan, in order to recruit the Indians who lived within them. The Natives, hopeful that the PLM's promised restoration of their former ejidos would prove true, agreed to join Salas' force. By 30 September, Salas had assembled a force of about a thousand men.", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "Though the PLM had several regional headquarters, including Salas' group in Veracruz, the primary source of the revolts strength was meant to be the local clubs, which numbered around 40 by August. As part of the general instructions the St. Louis Junta issued to their cells within Mexico, attempts would be made to supply them with contraband arms from across the border, but cells would largely be expected to arm and supply themselves from the land they were expected to control. this material difficulty, as well as fear for the safety of the members of different cells, saw the PLM adopt a highly isolated structure for their cells in Mexico, with members of one group ignorant of anyone outside their immediate leadership, who in turn reported only to one of five zone chiefs in Mexico, who in turn answered to the Junta or the Junta's special agents. Thus, inter-group coordination was run directly through the Junta, and was thus largely insufficient", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "Despite the isolated structure and largely unprofessional makeup of their cells, the Junta hoped to be able to both recruit a large score of military deserters and members of the public to their cause, believing that the key to achieving this support would be in launching their risings simultaneously, to create both the appearance of greater strength and paralyze the regime's forces. To this end, cells were instructed to remain in wait until receiving a signal, either in the form of a direct date sent by the Junta, or in the form of an event outside the chain of command, in the form of another strike at Cananea, the arrest of any member of the Junta, or another group launching an insurrection.", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 13, "text": "The other major issue facing the Rebellion was the need to acquire weapons, with the primary means by which they had to acquire them before the rising being to borrow money on the promise of a successful revolution. Thus, plans for the seizure of assets in captured towns were drawn up, focusing on seizing the offices and depositories of government officials and favorites of the regime, while leaving the property of neutral foreigners alone. A plan was also devised to requisition funds and supplies from individuals, though cells were instructed to issue a receipt upon doing so, redeemable upon the revolution's triumph. This, alongside the institution of elections and labor reforms in areas they held, and trials of captured regime officials, were hoped to sway public opinion to their side.", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 14, "text": "The Diaz regime also made preparations for a potential uprising they feared would be underway, even while publicly emphasizing that no such events could be taking place. The government, utilizing privately hired detectives, raids upon PLM headquarters in Mexico, and cooperation from U.S Postal Service in intercepting the mail of the St. Louis Junta, managed to build an efficient spy network centered on the Junta, and developed a decent idea of the scope of the PLM's planned revolution", "title": "Preparations" }, { "paragraph_id": 15, "text": "Though the St. Louis Junta had originally planned to travel to the border to inaugurate the Revolution in September, Magon had grown concerned that the Diaz regime had received warning of an impending action, and wired Salas to instead go into hiding. However, Salas feared that such a delay would see his organization wither away, and believed that a rising would be joined by the rest of the country.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 16, "text": "Before launching the main assault, Salas had a band sent out on 29 September to cut telephone wires and gather recruits in Pajapan municipality, and later sent them to seize the mail dispatched from Minzapan, and seized money bound for treasury officials in Chinameca, in an attempt to make up for the small number of forces and money they had.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 17, "text": "Salas' assault upon Acayucan, composed of 200 men, beginning at 11:00 P.M, initially met with great success, but quickly fell apart when Salas' became injured, taking a shot to the abdomen, causing his inexperienced force to panic and carry him off the battlefield in retreat.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 18, "text": "Though the assaults had meant to be simultaneous, the band who were meant to assault Puerto Mexico, under the command of Roman Marin, did not begin their assault until 3:00 A.M on 1 October, starting with the town of Pajapan. They soon managed to capture the town, arresting most of the authorities, seizing over $200, and installing their own officials in the town. they did not begin to set out for Puerto Mexico until 2:00 P.M, but partway through their march, became concerned about their lack of ammunition after seizing Pajapan, and, though they knew another armed band was awaiting them there, they turned back, and by 3 October had ultimately abandoned Pajapan and retreated into the mountains.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 19, "text": "The third assault, led by Enrique Novoa, was also delayed until 1 October, though they never managed to engage any government forces, as Novoa, alarmed by government reinforcements, abandoned his planned assault in favor of setting up an ambush, only for most of his force to desert him for his perceived cowardice, forcing Novoa to abandon any attempts at continuing.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 20, "text": "Several other cells, hearing of the rebellion in Acayucan, also launched assaults. One cell managed to seize the town of Ixhautlan on 1 October, though they were driven off by a force of soldiers under the command of the Jefe Politico of Minatitlan the next day, with some sporadic fighting occuring on the third. More far off risings in the states of Coahuila and Tabasco also struck, though these cells were soon put down by government forces.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 21, "text": "The final battle of the Acayucan uprising took place on 3 October, when MLP forces who had retreated from the Acayucan assault ambushed the government forces who had followed them. Though at first the Rebels had gained the upper hand, the government forces surrendering and claiming a desire to defect to the revolution. When they led the rebels to the village of San Pedro Soteapan, they soon revealed they had no true desire to defect, and ran through most of the rebels with bayonets, with only a few rebels managing to escape.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 22, "text": "A major factor behind the defeat of the rebellion was the Cells' lack of money, and subsequent dearth of both ammunition and weapons, as well as possessing only a small force of recruits, meaning they could only launch small assaults before being forced to retreat, and being too cautious with their forces.", "title": "Rebellion" }, { "paragraph_id": 23, "text": "Immediately after the Rebellion concluded, a period of mass arrests across the state followed for two weeks, with around 200 people sent to the prison of San Juan de Uliia, most without trial. The Diaz regime, taking advantage of damaged telephone wires and subsequent lack of information that had made it out, also sought to spin the rebellion off as a non issue. the Regime utilized the involvement of Indians in the assault to cast the rebellion as simply a case of Indian discontent manifesting as a small thwarted attack, with no greater political motivation or revolutionary implications behind it. Many local American papers, eager to satisfy the curiosity over a potential rebellion, largely printed the government statement verbatim and unaltered as part of the front page story, even reprinting rebukes by Diaz affiliated papers of other local papers questioning the official narrative. Other Papers, further afield who were less attached to the potential significance of the rebellion reported more altered versions of the government line emphasizing the attack, while some who could grasp the political significance simply focused on reporting the core point of the governments story, that the event held no political significance This suppression campaign had the intended effect of downplaying American concerns about potential revolution, seeing an advance on the stock market of both Mexican bonds, and of some American companies that operated in Mexico, following concerns of the potential harm a revolution would have on American business interests.", "title": "Aftermath" }, { "paragraph_id": 24, "text": "Following his retreat and laid low by his injury, Salas spent the remainder of the year in the hills, and was unable to support the Rio Blanco Strike a few months later. The PLM in Veracruz entered a period of dormancy throughout the next two years. Salas would not return to revolutionary action until he began to support the Anti-Reelctionist campaign and building up arms for what he suspected would be an outbreak of violence. Many of his former followers ultimately joined the forces of the Maderistas when the revolution broke out.", "title": "Aftermath" }, { "paragraph_id": 25, "text": "Soon after the failed rebellion, Magon organized a meeting of the Junta, however their meeting location had been revealed to the Diaz regime by traitors, who in turn informed U.S authorities, who launched a raid upon the meeting. Though many members of the Junta were arrested, Magon managed to escape, and was soon able to reestablish contact with the rest of the Junta through codes and aliases, and began to rebuild the organization.", "title": "Aftermath" }, { "paragraph_id": 26, "text": "Following the failure of the rebellions of 1906, the PLM began to drift away from its founding moderate politics to an Anarchist organization with extensive plans for the restructuring of Mexican society. This was partly due to Ricardo Flores Magon blaming the lack of ammunition, which he viewed as the primary cause of the 1906 Revolt's failure, to a lack of financial backing by wealthy Liberals within Mexico.", "title": "Aftermath" }, { "paragraph_id": 27, "text": "Reforms made in light of the 1906 revolts, were ultimately a mixed bag for future PLM efforts. by 1910, economic reforms, as well as the upsurge in income from Regeneracion, and in contributions following the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, left their cells much better off financially, though they still suffered from a dearth of recruits, with most cells still small in comparison to the regions they were expected to operate in, due in part to the greater organizational and financial systems the Anti-Reelectionists had access to, allowing them to attract a greater number of recruits. Further reforms also ordered revolutionary forces to not put down arms until the triumph of the revolution, which would ultimately be utilized to justify refusing to surrender to the Madero lead Interim Government, feeling that Madero had betrayed the revolution, helping to contribute to the next stage of the Mexican Revolution following Diaz's ouster.", "title": "Aftermath" } ]
The Acayucan Rebellion, also known as the Acayucan Uprising, was a brief uprising in Mexico, within the Acayucan municipality of the Mexican State of Veracruz, lasting from 30 September to 3 October 1906. It was part of a series of uprisings instigated by the Mexican Liberal Party, meant to start a revolt within Mexico against the regime of Porfirio Díaz. Though ultimately unsuccessful in its goal of igniting a revolt, the Acayucan Rebellion and the other uprisings before 1910 were early signs of the instability of the Porfiriato, and precursors to the Mexican Revolution.
2023-12-07T02:05:25Z
2023-12-31T01:40:03Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acayucan_Rebellion
75,504,470
Carrie Rheingans
Carrie Rheingans is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 47th district in the 2022 election.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Carrie Rheingans is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 47th district in the 2022 election.", "title": "" } ]
Carrie Rheingans is an American Democratic politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 47th district in the 2022 election.
2023-12-07T02:14:46Z
2023-12-07T02:14:46Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Rheingans
75,504,480
2023 College Football All-America Team
The 2023 College Football All-America Team includes those players of American college football who have been honored by various selector organizations as the best players at their respective positions. The selector organizations award the "All-America" honor annually following the conclusion of the fall college football season. The original All-America team was the 1889 College Football All-America Team selected by Caspar Whitney and Walter Camp. The National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled, in the 1950, the first list of All-Americans including first-team selections on teams created for a national audience that received national circulation with the intent of recognizing selections made from viewpoints that were nationwide. Since 1957, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) has bestowed Academic All-American recognition on male and female athletes in Divisions I, II, and III of the NCAA as well as National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and NJCAA athletes, including all NCAA championship sports. The 2023 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following College Football All-American first teams chosen by the following selector organizations: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), Sporting News (TSN, from its historic name of The Sporting News), Sports Illustrated (SI), The Athletic (Athletic), USA Today (USAT), ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Scout.com, Athlon Sports, Phil Steele, and Fox Sports (FOX). Currently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams in the sports of Division I FBS football and Division I men's basketball using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. Players are chosen against other players playing at their position only. To be selected a consensus All-American, players must be chosen to the first team on at least half of the five official selectors as recognized by the NCAA. Second- and third-team honors are used to break ties. Players named first-team by all five selectors are deemed unanimous All-Americans. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine consensus and unanimous All-Americans. The following players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2023. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2023 College Football All-America Team includes those players of American college football who have been honored by various selector organizations as the best players at their respective positions. The selector organizations award the \"All-America\" honor annually following the conclusion of the fall college football season. The original All-America team was the 1889 College Football All-America Team selected by Caspar Whitney and Walter Camp. The National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled, in the 1950, the first list of All-Americans including first-team selections on teams created for a national audience that received national circulation with the intent of recognizing selections made from viewpoints that were nationwide. Since 1957, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) has bestowed Academic All-American recognition on male and female athletes in Divisions I, II, and III of the NCAA as well as National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and NJCAA athletes, including all NCAA championship sports.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The 2023 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following College Football All-American first teams chosen by the following selector organizations: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), Sporting News (TSN, from its historic name of The Sporting News), Sports Illustrated (SI), The Athletic (Athletic), USA Today (USAT), ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Scout.com, Athlon Sports, Phil Steele, and Fox Sports (FOX).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Currently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams in the sports of Division I FBS football and Division I men's basketball using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. Players are chosen against other players playing at their position only. To be selected a consensus All-American, players must be chosen to the first team on at least half of the five official selectors as recognized by the NCAA. Second- and third-team honors are used to break ties. Players named first-team by all five selectors are deemed unanimous All-Americans. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine consensus and unanimous All-Americans.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The following players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2023. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*).", "title": "" } ]
The 2023 College Football All-America Team includes those players of American college football who have been honored by various selector organizations as the best players at their respective positions. The selector organizations award the "All-America" honor annually following the conclusion of the fall college football season. The original All-America team was the 1889 College Football All-America Team selected by Caspar Whitney and Walter Camp. The National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled, in the 1950, the first list of All-Americans including first-team selections on teams created for a national audience that received national circulation with the intent of recognizing selections made from viewpoints that were nationwide. Since 1957, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) has bestowed Academic All-American recognition on male and female athletes in Divisions I, II, and III of the NCAA as well as National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and NJCAA athletes, including all NCAA championship sports. The 2023 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following College Football All-American first teams chosen by the following selector organizations: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), Sporting News, Sports Illustrated (SI), The Athletic (Athletic), USA Today (USAT), ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Scout.com, Athlon Sports, Phil Steele, and Fox Sports (FOX). Currently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams in the sports of Division I FBS football and Division I men's basketball using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. Players are chosen against other players playing at their position only. To be selected a consensus All-American, players must be chosen to the first team on at least half of the five official selectors as recognized by the NCAA. Second- and third-team honors are used to break ties. Players named first-team by all five selectors are deemed unanimous All-Americans. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine consensus and unanimous All-Americans. The following players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2023. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*).
2023-12-07T02:16:44Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_College_Football_All-America_Team
75,504,524
Kurrr
Kurrr (subtitled with Yenar Yenar Ga; transl. Will definitely come) is a Marathi-language comedy theatre play written and directed by Prasad Khandekar. Produced by Vishakha Subhedar and Poonam Jadhav under the banner of V. R. Production, Pragyas Creations respectively. The play was originally released on 4 December 2021 in theatres. Prasad Khandekar and Namrata Sambherao left the drama in 2023, replaced by Priyadarshan Jadhav and Mayura Ranade. There are many contradictory people in this house. Despite their best efforts, the married couple is unable to have a kid, which has caused them to become eager. A new family member enters the fray among all of this chaos, giving the situation a "humorous" twist that mocks both the nausea of motherhood and the longing of fatherhood. It's the ideal blend of discomfort and joy. Gayatri Devrukhkar of Rangbhoom.com in its review praised overall play and wrote "The perfection of props and lighting are so beautifully matched that the beauty of the drama is increasing moment by moment" and further praised the costumes writing "Colorist Ulhesh Khandare and costume designer Archana Thawre Shah have dressed up all the actors in an accurate manner as per the story." Mumbai Tak wrote "Set Design of Bendre, Lighting of Amogh Phadke, and Music by Amir Hadkar are the soul of this play." Praised choreography called "excellent".
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kurrr (subtitled with Yenar Yenar Ga; transl. Will definitely come) is a Marathi-language comedy theatre play written and directed by Prasad Khandekar. Produced by Vishakha Subhedar and Poonam Jadhav under the banner of V. R. Production, Pragyas Creations respectively.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The play was originally released on 4 December 2021 in theatres. Prasad Khandekar and Namrata Sambherao left the drama in 2023, replaced by Priyadarshan Jadhav and Mayura Ranade.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "There are many contradictory people in this house. Despite their best efforts, the married couple is unable to have a kid, which has caused them to become eager. A new family member enters the fray among all of this chaos, giving the situation a \"humorous\" twist that mocks both the nausea of motherhood and the longing of fatherhood. It's the ideal blend of discomfort and joy.", "title": "Plot" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Gayatri Devrukhkar of Rangbhoom.com in its review praised overall play and wrote \"The perfection of props and lighting are so beautifully matched that the beauty of the drama is increasing moment by moment\" and further praised the costumes writing \"Colorist Ulhesh Khandare and costume designer Archana Thawre Shah have dressed up all the actors in an accurate manner as per the story.\" Mumbai Tak wrote \"Set Design of Bendre, Lighting of Amogh Phadke, and Music by Amir Hadkar are the soul of this play.\" Praised choreography called \"excellent\".", "title": "Reception" } ]
Kurrr is a Marathi-language comedy theatre play written and directed by Prasad Khandekar. Produced by Vishakha Subhedar and Poonam Jadhav under the banner of V. R. Production, Pragyas Creations respectively. The play was originally released on 4 December 2021 in theatres. Prasad Khandekar and Namrata Sambherao left the drama in 2023, replaced by Priyadarshan Jadhav and Mayura Ranade.
2023-12-07T02:26:32Z
2023-12-27T17:55:13Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurrr
75,504,525
Arakkambakkam
Arakkambakkam is a village located in the Ambattur block of Thiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India. Arakkambakkam is situated in the Ambattur region of Tamil Nadu, approximately 11 kilometers northwest of Chennai. The village covers an area of 1.82 square kilometers with a population of 1402, resulting in a population density of 770 people per square kilometer. The male and female populations are 700 and 702, respectively. The village is part of the Ambattur block in the Thiruvallur district. According to the Census of India 2011 Arakkambakkam has a population of 1402. The male and female populations are 700 and 702, respectively. The village covers an area of 1.82 square kilometers, resulting in a population density of 770 people per square kilometer. The literacy rate of Arakkambakkam is 72.18%, with 77.86% of males and 66.52% of females being literate. There are about 374 houses in Arakkambakkam. Arakkambakkam has good connectivity with the following services: The nearest town to Arakkambakkam is Avadi, located 11 km away.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Arakkambakkam is a village located in the Ambattur block of Thiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Arakkambakkam is situated in the Ambattur region of Tamil Nadu, approximately 11 kilometers northwest of Chennai. The village covers an area of 1.82 square kilometers with a population of 1402, resulting in a population density of 770 people per square kilometer. The male and female populations are 700 and 702, respectively. The village is part of the Ambattur block in the Thiruvallur district.", "title": "Geography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "According to the Census of India 2011 Arakkambakkam has a population of 1402. The male and female populations are 700 and 702, respectively. The village covers an area of 1.82 square kilometers, resulting in a population density of 770 people per square kilometer. The literacy rate of Arakkambakkam is 72.18%, with 77.86% of males and 66.52% of females being literate. There are about 374 houses in Arakkambakkam.", "title": "Demographics" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Arakkambakkam has good connectivity with the following services:", "title": "Connectivity" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The nearest town to Arakkambakkam is Avadi, located 11 km away.", "title": "Nearest town" } ]
Arakkambakkam is a village located in the Ambattur block of Thiruvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arakkambakkam
75,504,536
Drew Folmar
Drew Folmar (born c. 1978) is an American college football coach. He is the assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, and quarterbacks coach for Elon University, positions he has held since 2019. He was the head football coach for Kutztown University of Pennsylvania in 2013. He also coached for Millersville, Merchant Marine, New Haven, and Lehigh. He played college football for Millersville as a quarterback.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Drew Folmar (born c. 1978) is an American college football coach. He is the assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, and quarterbacks coach for Elon University, positions he has held since 2019. He was the head football coach for Kutztown University of Pennsylvania in 2013. He also coached for Millersville, Merchant Marine, New Haven, and Lehigh. He played college football for Millersville as a quarterback.", "title": "" } ]
Drew Folmar is an American college football coach. He is the assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, and quarterbacks coach for Elon University, positions he has held since 2019. He was the head football coach for Kutztown University of Pennsylvania in 2013. He also coached for Millersville, Merchant Marine, New Haven, and Lehigh. He played college football for Millersville as a quarterback.
2023-12-07T02:30:00Z
2023-12-18T15:26:03Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drew_Folmar
75,504,538
Donni Steele
Donni Steele is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 54th district in the 2022 election.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Donni Steele is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 54th district in the 2022 election.", "title": "" } ]
Donni Steele is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 54th district in the 2022 election.
2023-12-07T02:30:29Z
2023-12-07T02:30:29Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donni_Steele
75,504,543
The Blackjacks (house)
The Blackjacks is the historic home of John Joseph Mathews built in 1932, now part of Tallgrass Prairie Preserve. In 1932, John Joseph Mathews built a sandstone house in the Tallgrass Prairie in Osage County, which he named "The Blackjacks." He spent the majority of his writing career writing from here among the blackjack trees. The home was largely abandoned after Mathews death in 1979 and he was buried on the property. In 2014, the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve purchased the property from the family. The Blackjacks is located on the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve. Tours of the home are held seasonally.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Blackjacks is the historic home of John Joseph Mathews built in 1932, now part of Tallgrass Prairie Preserve.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In 1932, John Joseph Mathews built a sandstone house in the Tallgrass Prairie in Osage County, which he named \"The Blackjacks.\" He spent the majority of his writing career writing from here among the blackjack trees. The home was largely abandoned after Mathews death in 1979 and he was buried on the property. In 2014, the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve purchased the property from the family.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The Blackjacks is located on the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve. Tours of the home are held seasonally.", "title": "Location and tourism" } ]
The Blackjacks is the historic home of John Joseph Mathews built in 1932, now part of Tallgrass Prairie Preserve.
2023-12-07T02:31:14Z
2023-12-07T06:34:58Z
[ "Template:Infobox building", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blackjacks_(house)
75,504,564
Lower Silver Creek (Coyote Creek tributary)
Lower Silver Creek is a 4.7-mile-long (7.6 km) northwest and westward-flowing stream currently originating just north of Lake Cunningham in Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Historically, Silver Creek was known as Arroyo de Socayre and ran through the Rancho Socayre. Silver Creek was probably named for its silvery appearance, although the word "silver" may have been used to indicate nearby quicksilver (mercury ore) deposits. The creek currently drains an area of over 43 square miles (110 km) with its source in the Edenvalle Hills of southeast San Jose, California. Upper Silver Creek and Thompson Creek both begin in the Edenvale Hills, and historically sank into the alluvial basin of Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose. Then they resurfaced and flowed into a large freshwater marsh known historically as Laguna Socayre, and referred to more recently as Silver Creek Marsh. In 1978, Silver Creek Marsh was excavated into a flood water detention pond or reservoir, now known as Lake Cunningham. Thus, Lower Silver Creek used to begin southwest of where Lake Cunningham is today, but now its source is regarded as just north of this artificial lake by the Santa Clara Valley Water District (now Valley Water) at the confluence of Thompson Creek and Flint Creek. In the 1970s, Upper Silver Creek flows were shunted due west into a flood control channel discharging directly to Coyote Creek south of Singleton Road. After its current source at the confluence of Flint Creek and Thompson Creek, Lower Silver Creek tributaries include South Babb Creek, North Babb Creek, and Miguelita Creek. In the 1970s, the East Zone Flood Project connected many of these tributaries to Lower Silver Creek to provide storm drainage for urban development. In 1962 Lower Silver Creek was reported as an historical migration route and habitat for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Lower Silver Creek is a 4.7-mile-long (7.6 km) northwest and westward-flowing stream currently originating just north of Lake Cunningham in Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Historically, Silver Creek was known as Arroyo de Socayre and ran through the Rancho Socayre. Silver Creek was probably named for its silvery appearance, although the word \"silver\" may have been used to indicate nearby quicksilver (mercury ore) deposits.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The creek currently drains an area of over 43 square miles (110 km) with its source in the Edenvalle Hills of southeast San Jose, California. Upper Silver Creek and Thompson Creek both begin in the Edenvale Hills, and historically sank into the alluvial basin of Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose. Then they resurfaced and flowed into a large freshwater marsh known historically as Laguna Socayre, and referred to more recently as Silver Creek Marsh. In 1978, Silver Creek Marsh was excavated into a flood water detention pond or reservoir, now known as Lake Cunningham. Thus, Lower Silver Creek used to begin southwest of where Lake Cunningham is today, but now its source is regarded as just north of this artificial lake by the Santa Clara Valley Water District (now Valley Water) at the confluence of Thompson Creek and Flint Creek. In the 1970s, Upper Silver Creek flows were shunted due west into a flood control channel discharging directly to Coyote Creek south of Singleton Road.", "title": "Watershed and Course" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "After its current source at the confluence of Flint Creek and Thompson Creek, Lower Silver Creek tributaries include South Babb Creek, North Babb Creek, and Miguelita Creek. In the 1970s, the East Zone Flood Project connected many of these tributaries to Lower Silver Creek to provide storm drainage for urban development.", "title": "Watershed and Course" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 1962 Lower Silver Creek was reported as an historical migration route and habitat for steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).", "title": "Ecology and Conservation" } ]
Lower Silver Creek is a 4.7-mile-long (7.6 km) northwest and westward-flowing stream currently originating just north of Lake Cunningham in Evergreen Valley in southeast San Jose, Santa Clara County, California. It is tributary to Coyote Creek, whose waters flow to south San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
2023-12-07T02:35:43Z
2023-12-07T09:56:01Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Silver_Creek_(Coyote_Creek_tributary)
75,504,591
Dana (payment service)
Dana is a digital financial service based in Jakarta, Indonesia, which acts as a digital payment to replace conventional wallets. Founded in 2018, DANA is a digital wallet registered with Bank Indonesia with four licenses including electronic money, digital wallet, money transfer, and Digital Financial Liquidity. The experience of working in the digital payment industry and the potential for the digital payment business in Indonesia, which is considered promising, encouraged Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Vincent Iswara to establish the DANA digital wallet. Dana's journey began in 2018 as an app offering payments, loyalty points and financial services powered by KMK Online's digital arm. DANA has received permission to operate as a fintech company throughout Indonesia on December 5 2018. Through DANA, users are allowed to carry out transactions ranging from bill payments, top up games online, credit or DANA Paylater, transactions using barcode scanning, to e-commerce. DANA is an official digital payment platform which is directly supervised by BI (Bank Indonesia), which carries an open platform and can be used in various applications, online and conventional outlets. DANA was developed by the company startup which is an Indonesian legal entity. The main investor of the Fund is PT Elang Sejahtera Mandiri with an ownership portion of 99 percent. Elang Sejahtera Mandiri is a subsidiary of PT Elang Mahkota Teknologi Tbk (EMTEK). EMTEK has a collaboration with Ant Financial. With the collaboration between Emtek and Ant Financial, DANA received technological support from Ant Financial. Alipay technology has received recognition in terms of security and reliability in the world of digital transactions. DANA has special collaborations with national banks, such as Bank Mandiri, BCA and BRI. DANA was developed as a wallet specifically for storing limited amounts of funds in accordance with Bank Indonesia regulations and security standards. Since launching the product on November 11 2018 until the end of June 2019, DANA has had 20 million users, and reached 1.5 million transactions per day. DANA has more than 800 employees. As a financial technology company, DANA is supported by technology such as "DANA Protection", has ISO 27001 Certification and PCI-DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) Certificate, and implements the zero-data sharing policy principle. relating to Personal Identifiable Information. In August 2021, rumors circulated stating that Sinar Mas would buy 100% of DANA's shares. However, this rumor has appeared several times, even though it was finally quite close to the entry of two Sinarmas Group companies, Bank Sinarmas and PT Dian Swaistika Sentosa, which Sinarmas denied was just an ordinary investment. With the entry of this funding, the Sinarmas Group is expected to become the largest shareholder, leaving Kreatif Media Karya (EMTEK) with 49% ownership..
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Dana is a digital financial service based in Jakarta, Indonesia, which acts as a digital payment to replace conventional wallets. Founded in 2018, DANA is a digital wallet registered with Bank Indonesia with four licenses including electronic money, digital wallet, money transfer, and Digital Financial Liquidity.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The experience of working in the digital payment industry and the potential for the digital payment business in Indonesia, which is considered promising, encouraged Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Vincent Iswara to establish the DANA digital wallet. Dana's journey began in 2018 as an app offering payments, loyalty points and financial services powered by KMK Online's digital arm. DANA has received permission to operate as a fintech company throughout Indonesia on December 5 2018. Through DANA, users are allowed to carry out transactions ranging from bill payments, top up games online, credit or DANA Paylater, transactions using barcode scanning, to e-commerce. DANA is an official digital payment platform which is directly supervised by BI (Bank Indonesia), which carries an open platform and can be used in various applications, online and conventional outlets.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "DANA was developed by the company startup which is an Indonesian legal entity. The main investor of the Fund is PT Elang Sejahtera Mandiri with an ownership portion of 99 percent. Elang Sejahtera Mandiri is a subsidiary of PT Elang Mahkota Teknologi Tbk (EMTEK). EMTEK has a collaboration with Ant Financial. With the collaboration between Emtek and Ant Financial, DANA received technological support from Ant Financial. Alipay technology has received recognition in terms of security and reliability in the world of digital transactions. DANA has special collaborations with national banks, such as Bank Mandiri, BCA and BRI. DANA was developed as a wallet specifically for storing limited amounts of funds in accordance with Bank Indonesia regulations and security standards.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Since launching the product on November 11 2018 until the end of June 2019, DANA has had 20 million users, and reached 1.5 million transactions per day. DANA has more than 800 employees. As a financial technology company, DANA is supported by technology such as \"DANA Protection\", has ISO 27001 Certification and PCI-DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) Certificate, and implements the zero-data sharing policy principle. relating to Personal Identifiable Information.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In August 2021, rumors circulated stating that Sinar Mas would buy 100% of DANA's shares. However, this rumor has appeared several times, even though it was finally quite close to the entry of two Sinarmas Group companies, Bank Sinarmas and PT Dian Swaistika Sentosa, which Sinarmas denied was just an ordinary investment. With the entry of this funding, the Sinarmas Group is expected to become the largest shareholder, leaving Kreatif Media Karya (EMTEK) with 49% ownership..", "title": "History" } ]
Dana is a digital financial service based in Jakarta, Indonesia, which acts as a digital payment to replace conventional wallets. Founded in 2018, DANA is a digital wallet registered with Bank Indonesia with four licenses including electronic money, digital wallet, money transfer, and Digital Financial Liquidity.
2023-12-07T02:39:02Z
2023-12-07T23:14:29Z
[ "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Infobox company", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dana_(payment_service)
75,504,605
Lieutenancy Council
The Lieutenancy Council (Latin: Consilium regium locumtenentiale; Hungarian: Helytartótanács), also known as Viceregal Council or Lord Lieutenancy, was a leading governmental institution in the Kingdom of Hungary between 1723 and 1848. Headed by the Palatine (or viceroy), or by the lord lieutenant, the council reported directly to the king. With the exception of the judiciary, and the administration of military and fiscal affairs, all governmental affairs fell within its jurisdiction. Initially, the council had twenty-two members, appointed by the king from among the Catholic prelates and nobleman.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Lieutenancy Council (Latin: Consilium regium locumtenentiale; Hungarian: Helytartótanács), also known as Viceregal Council or Lord Lieutenancy, was a leading governmental institution in the Kingdom of Hungary between 1723 and 1848. Headed by the Palatine (or viceroy), or by the lord lieutenant, the council reported directly to the king. With the exception of the judiciary, and the administration of military and fiscal affairs, all governmental affairs fell within its jurisdiction. Initially, the council had twenty-two members, appointed by the king from among the Catholic prelates and nobleman.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "", "title": "Sources" } ]
The Lieutenancy Council, also known as Viceregal Council or Lord Lieutenancy, was a leading governmental institution in the Kingdom of Hungary between 1723 and 1848. Headed by the Palatine, or by the lord lieutenant, the council reported directly to the king. With the exception of the judiciary, and the administration of military and fiscal affairs, all governmental affairs fell within its jurisdiction. Initially, the council had twenty-two members, appointed by the king from among the Catholic prelates and nobleman.
2023-12-07T02:40:34Z
2023-12-12T23:22:32Z
[ "Template:Refend", "Template:Hungary-hist-stub", "Template:Lang-la", "Template:Lang-hu", "Template:Sfn", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Refbegin", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lieutenancy_Council
75,504,609
Kathy Schmaltz
Kathy Schmaltz is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 46th district in the 2022 election. Schmaltz is a Michigan State University graduate and was a news anchor at Lansing’s WILX-TV for 14 years.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kathy Schmaltz is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 46th district in the 2022 election.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Schmaltz is a Michigan State University graduate and was a news anchor at Lansing’s WILX-TV for 14 years.", "title": "" } ]
Kathy Schmaltz is an American Republican politician from Michigan. She was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives from the 46th district in the 2022 election. Schmaltz is a Michigan State University graduate and was a news anchor at Lansing’s WILX-TV for 14 years.
2023-12-07T02:41:09Z
2023-12-07T02:41:09Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Ballotpedia", "Template:Michigan House of Representatives", "Template:Michigan-politician-stub", "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox officeholder" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathy_Schmaltz
75,504,618
M.A. Mortenson Company
The M.A. Mortenson Company, more commonly known under its Mortenson Construction brand, is an American construction company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with 2014 sales of (estimated) $3 billion. The company has design offices in Chicago, Denver, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Phoenix, and Seattle. In 2015, the company said it had completed 290 projects worth $4.9 billion for the federal government, including: the U.S. Coast Guard Station in Sabine Pass, Texas; the headquarters of the United States Army Installation Management Command (IMCOM) in Fort Sam Houston; and the Navy's largest hangar in Jacksonville. Mortenson is noted as a general contractor that has built numerous sports stadiums and arenas, including U.S. Bank Stadium, Fiserv Forum, and Chase Center. Mortenson Construction is also active in the field of renewable energy. In the area of wind energy, Mortenson received the contract for the 300 MW Blackspring Ridge Wind Project in Carmangay, Alberta, Canada for EDF-EN Canada. Mortenson installed a total of 15,000 megawatts of wind power by 2015. In 2014, with an addition of 512.9 megawatts solar power capacity, Mortenson was the second largest US company after First Solar (1,023 megawatts) and ahead of SolarCity ( 502 megawatts). One of the largest projects is the construction of the solar power plants Solar Star I and II in Rosamond, California with a total of 597 MW of output that can generate electricity for 255,000 households. The company was founded in Richfield, Minnesota in April 1954 by M. A. Mortenson, Sr., formerly a vice president with the D'Arcy Leck Construction Co. While with D'Arcy Leck, Mortenson had supervised the construction of several local schools, a veterinary building on the farm campus of the University of Minnesota, and other industrial and commercial sites.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The M.A. Mortenson Company, more commonly known under its Mortenson Construction brand, is an American construction company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with 2014 sales of (estimated) $3 billion. The company has design offices in Chicago, Denver, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Phoenix, and Seattle.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In 2015, the company said it had completed 290 projects worth $4.9 billion for the federal government, including: the U.S. Coast Guard Station in Sabine Pass, Texas; the headquarters of the United States Army Installation Management Command (IMCOM) in Fort Sam Houston; and the Navy's largest hangar in Jacksonville.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Mortenson is noted as a general contractor that has built numerous sports stadiums and arenas, including U.S. Bank Stadium, Fiserv Forum, and Chase Center.", "title": "Sports venues" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Mortenson Construction is also active in the field of renewable energy.", "title": "Renewable energy" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In the area of wind energy, Mortenson received the contract for the 300 MW Blackspring Ridge Wind Project in Carmangay, Alberta, Canada for EDF-EN Canada. Mortenson installed a total of 15,000 megawatts of wind power by 2015.", "title": "Renewable energy" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2014, with an addition of 512.9 megawatts solar power capacity, Mortenson was the second largest US company after First Solar (1,023 megawatts) and ahead of SolarCity ( 502 megawatts). One of the largest projects is the construction of the solar power plants Solar Star I and II in Rosamond, California with a total of 597 MW of output that can generate electricity for 255,000 households.", "title": "Renewable energy" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "The company was founded in Richfield, Minnesota in April 1954 by M. A. Mortenson, Sr., formerly a vice president with the D'Arcy Leck Construction Co. While with D'Arcy Leck, Mortenson had supervised the construction of several local schools, a veterinary building on the farm campus of the University of Minnesota, and other industrial and commercial sites.", "title": "History" } ]
The M.A. Mortenson Company, more commonly known under its Mortenson Construction brand, is an American construction company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with 2014 sales of (estimated) $3 billion. The company has design offices in Chicago, Denver, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Phoenix, and Seattle. In 2015, the company said it had completed 290 projects worth $4.9 billion for the federal government, including: the U.S. Coast Guard Station in Sabine Pass, Texas; the headquarters of the United States Army Installation Management Command (IMCOM) in Fort Sam Houston; and the Navy's largest hangar in Jacksonville.
2023-12-07T02:42:47Z
2023-12-09T15:53:55Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M.A._Mortenson_Company
75,504,625
Alexstrasza
Alexstrasza, also known as Alexstrasza the Life-Binder, is a major character in the Warcraft franchise created by Blizzard Entertainment. A female red dragon with the power to shapeshift into the form of a High Elf, she is the queen of all dragons and the leader of the organization known as the red dragonflight. Her power as guardian of all life was granted to her by the titans, ancient primordial beings of godlike power. While appearing in Warcraft lore since 1995, she was first seen as a non-player character in the 2008 World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King and subsequent expansions. She has since featured as a playable character in the spin-off game Heroes of the Storm. Her most recent appearance was in the 2022 Dragonflight expansion, which focuses more heavily on her character. Alexstrasza has been praised by critics and fans as a prominent and powerful female heroine, and she remains an ambassador character for World of Warcraft. However, her sexualized appearance when in humanoid form has caused controversy and was changed over time. Part of her backstory in which she was enslaved by villainous orcs and forced to breed mounts for them also drew controversy, with a time-travel quest involving it being rewritten after encountering backlash from fans. Alexstrasza first appeared in the 1995 Warcraft II, where she was represented as a building exclusive to the orc campaign, the Dragon Roost. Her dragon form, with a team-dependent color scheme, is depicted in adamantine chains, and is used to generate new dragon units. She did not appear as an NPC until World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King, where she was given a redesign. In her new design, Alexstrasza takes the appearance of a massive and powerful red dragon with golden bracelets, four horns, and horn ornaments. She is able to become a High Elf to better blend in with other humanoid races, though she retains her horns. While she can transform into any race, she chose the High Elves because they revered her the most throughout history. For thousands of years, Alexstrasza was a member of the benevolent Dragon Aspects, who were given their power by the ancient primordial titans in order to ensure order in Azeroth. About twenty years prior to the events of Lich King, the villainous Deathwing, once a fellow Dragon Aspect named Neltharion, manipulated the Dragonmaw Clan, a group of orcs, to use a magical artifact known as the Dragon Soul to capture and enslave Alextrasza in the mountain fortress of Grim Batol. She and her mate Tyranastrasz were forced to breed drakes for the Dragonmaw riders before she was freed by a band of adventurers and the other four uncorrupted aspects. Meanwhile, Tyranastrasz perished before he could be rescued. After being saved, she agreed to honor her debt by helping the people who rescued her fight back against Malygos, the crazed Aspect of the blue dragonflight. When interpreting the character as a Heroes of the Storm fighter, Blizzard developers were forced to lower her power from its canonical levels, saying that making her an accurate size and power "broke the game". In order to ensure game balance, they reduced the size and destructive abilities of her dragon form. Alexstrasza was noted as one of the most prominent of the game's female characters but also an exception in a male-dominated fictional history. Digital Culture, Play, and Identity compared Alextrasza's and the roles of other major women in the game as replications of Eve meeting Lucifer to introduce evil into the world, specifically mentioning her agreement to act as a puppet for evil forces in order to save her children. Alexstrasza's appearance as a playable Heroes of the Storm character was generally praised, but received complaints regarding its lack of accuracy in comparison to her World of Warcraft incarnation. Maddy Myers of Kotaku stated that Alexstrasza's ability to transform from a humanoid healer into a dragon felt "great", "exciting and challenging", and that it "feels incredible to unleash those dragon powers and turn around a team fight". However, she also noted that Alextrasza's powers felt lessened compared to World of Warcraft, and her willingness to battle conflicted with her compassionate devotion to healing. As part of the Fractures of Time update to World of Warcraft, one particular quest added to the Public Test Realm (PTR), a beta testing server, had the player going back in time to prevent the Dragonmaw Clan from misplacing the Dragon Soul in order to maintain the timeline. The fact that this ultimately led to Alextrasza being imprisoned, tortured and exploited caused an uproar amongst fans and led to the quest's removal. It was replaced with a rewritten quest in which players helped free her from Grim Batol instead, and its dialog was made more empathetic. Cass Marshall of Polygon praised Dragonflight as being the first expansion to make her "more of an actual character" as opposed to a "boring" goddess-like figure. She noted the fact that Alexstrasza was given additional character flaws, such as acting cowardly and prioritizing "her powers and the peace of Azeroth above even her closest relationships". An Easter egg acknowledging Alextrasza's reputation as an enticing character, or "thirst trap", amongst fans was added to Dragonflight, in which Alextrasza asks the player if she has "big mom energy". While this can technically be taken literally, it also references the idea of a sexually attractive mother.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alexstrasza, also known as Alexstrasza the Life-Binder, is a major character in the Warcraft franchise created by Blizzard Entertainment. A female red dragon with the power to shapeshift into the form of a High Elf, she is the queen of all dragons and the leader of the organization known as the red dragonflight. Her power as guardian of all life was granted to her by the titans, ancient primordial beings of godlike power. While appearing in Warcraft lore since 1995, she was first seen as a non-player character in the 2008 World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King and subsequent expansions. She has since featured as a playable character in the spin-off game Heroes of the Storm. Her most recent appearance was in the 2022 Dragonflight expansion, which focuses more heavily on her character.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Alexstrasza has been praised by critics and fans as a prominent and powerful female heroine, and she remains an ambassador character for World of Warcraft. However, her sexualized appearance when in humanoid form has caused controversy and was changed over time. Part of her backstory in which she was enslaved by villainous orcs and forced to breed mounts for them also drew controversy, with a time-travel quest involving it being rewritten after encountering backlash from fans.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Alexstrasza first appeared in the 1995 Warcraft II, where she was represented as a building exclusive to the orc campaign, the Dragon Roost. Her dragon form, with a team-dependent color scheme, is depicted in adamantine chains, and is used to generate new dragon units. She did not appear as an NPC until World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King, where she was given a redesign.", "title": "Appearance" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In her new design, Alexstrasza takes the appearance of a massive and powerful red dragon with golden bracelets, four horns, and horn ornaments. She is able to become a High Elf to better blend in with other humanoid races, though she retains her horns. While she can transform into any race, she chose the High Elves because they revered her the most throughout history.", "title": "Appearance" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "For thousands of years, Alexstrasza was a member of the benevolent Dragon Aspects, who were given their power by the ancient primordial titans in order to ensure order in Azeroth. About twenty years prior to the events of Lich King, the villainous Deathwing, once a fellow Dragon Aspect named Neltharion, manipulated the Dragonmaw Clan, a group of orcs, to use a magical artifact known as the Dragon Soul to capture and enslave Alextrasza in the mountain fortress of Grim Batol. She and her mate Tyranastrasz were forced to breed drakes for the Dragonmaw riders before she was freed by a band of adventurers and the other four uncorrupted aspects. Meanwhile, Tyranastrasz perished before he could be rescued.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "After being saved, she agreed to honor her debt by helping the people who rescued her fight back against Malygos, the crazed Aspect of the blue dragonflight.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "When interpreting the character as a Heroes of the Storm fighter, Blizzard developers were forced to lower her power from its canonical levels, saying that making her an accurate size and power \"broke the game\". In order to ensure game balance, they reduced the size and destructive abilities of her dragon form.", "title": "Development" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Alexstrasza was noted as one of the most prominent of the game's female characters but also an exception in a male-dominated fictional history. Digital Culture, Play, and Identity compared Alextrasza's and the roles of other major women in the game as replications of Eve meeting Lucifer to introduce evil into the world, specifically mentioning her agreement to act as a puppet for evil forces in order to save her children.", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Alexstrasza's appearance as a playable Heroes of the Storm character was generally praised, but received complaints regarding its lack of accuracy in comparison to her World of Warcraft incarnation. Maddy Myers of Kotaku stated that Alexstrasza's ability to transform from a humanoid healer into a dragon felt \"great\", \"exciting and challenging\", and that it \"feels incredible to unleash those dragon powers and turn around a team fight\". However, she also noted that Alextrasza's powers felt lessened compared to World of Warcraft, and her willingness to battle conflicted with her compassionate devotion to healing.", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "As part of the Fractures of Time update to World of Warcraft, one particular quest added to the Public Test Realm (PTR), a beta testing server, had the player going back in time to prevent the Dragonmaw Clan from misplacing the Dragon Soul in order to maintain the timeline. The fact that this ultimately led to Alextrasza being imprisoned, tortured and exploited caused an uproar amongst fans and led to the quest's removal. It was replaced with a rewritten quest in which players helped free her from Grim Batol instead, and its dialog was made more empathetic. Cass Marshall of Polygon praised Dragonflight as being the first expansion to make her \"more of an actual character\" as opposed to a \"boring\" goddess-like figure. She noted the fact that Alexstrasza was given additional character flaws, such as acting cowardly and prioritizing \"her powers and the peace of Azeroth above even her closest relationships\".", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "An Easter egg acknowledging Alextrasza's reputation as an enticing character, or \"thirst trap\", amongst fans was added to Dragonflight, in which Alextrasza asks the player if she has \"big mom energy\". While this can technically be taken literally, it also references the idea of a sexually attractive mother.", "title": "Reception" } ]
Alexstrasza, also known as Alexstrasza the Life-Binder, is a major character in the Warcraft franchise created by Blizzard Entertainment. A female red dragon with the power to shapeshift into the form of a High Elf, she is the queen of all dragons and the leader of the organization known as the red dragonflight. Her power as guardian of all life was granted to her by the titans, ancient primordial beings of godlike power. While appearing in Warcraft lore since 1995, she was first seen as a non-player character in the 2008 World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King and subsequent expansions. She has since featured as a playable character in the spin-off game Heroes of the Storm. Her most recent appearance was in the 2022 Dragonflight expansion, which focuses more heavily on her character. Alexstrasza has been praised by critics and fans as a prominent and powerful female heroine, and she remains an ambassador character for World of Warcraft. However, her sexualized appearance when in humanoid form has caused controversy and was changed over time. Part of her backstory in which she was enslaved by villainous orcs and forced to breed mounts for them also drew controversy, with a time-travel quest involving it being rewritten after encountering backlash from fans.
2023-12-07T02:45:12Z
2023-12-18T06:52:44Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexstrasza
75,504,635
Razaq Olatunde Rom Kalilu
Razaq Olatunde Rom Kalilu is a professor of art and history in the faculty of environmental sciences, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso. He is an acting vice chancellor of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology known as (LAUTECH), which is located in Ogbomoso, Oyo State. He is an alumnus of the University of Ife (which is now known as Obafemi Awolowo University) and the University of Ibadan He holds a PhD from the University of Ibadan (1992) He began working at Ladoke Akintola University of Technology on September 1, 1992. His appointment as a Professor of Arts and Arts History was on October 1, 1999. He was appointed acting vice-chancellor on June 12, 2023. Before joining the university. Advertising, elementary, secondary, college of education, and polytechnic education systems were all areas of expertise for Kalilu. Kalilu is not just an academic; he is also an administrator. He has held positions which include: His publicationsinclude the following:
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Razaq Olatunde Rom Kalilu is a professor of art and history in the faculty of environmental sciences, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso. He is an acting vice chancellor of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology known as (LAUTECH), which is located in Ogbomoso, Oyo State.
2023-12-07T02:47:29Z
2023-12-17T18:34:55Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Razaq_Olatunde_Rom_Kalilu
75,504,636
2024 in Samoa
Events in the year 2024 in Samoa.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Events in the year 2024 in Samoa.", "title": "" } ]
Events in the year 2024 in Samoa.
2023-12-07T02:47:50Z
2023-12-07T03:17:40Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Samoa
75,504,658
Cilly Dartell
Priscilla Maria Regina Veltmeijer (27 October 1957 – 6 December 2023), known professionally as Cilly Dartell, was a Dutch radio and television presenter and actress. She is best known for presenting the program Hart van Nederland, which she presented from 1996 to 2012, as well as the program Shownieuws. Dartell performed in theater from 1974 to 1990, first with various cabaret groups and theater companies such as Cabaret Nar. She later switched to musicals. For example, she played a leading role in the Annie M.G. Schmidt musical De dader heeft het gedaan (The perpetrator did it), and she appeared in the musical Grease. Dartell also recorded numerous commercials, cartoons and documentaries. In 1990, she switched to journalism, but in 1992 she played a guest role in the VARA police series Bureau Kruislaan. Until 1996, she was heard in cultural radio programs on Radio 1 and Radio 2 and she made television programs for the AVRO. In 1996, Dartell left for commercial broadcasting, where she presented Hart van Nederland and Shownieuws for SBS6. She also devised and produced musical specials. From January 2013 to May 2014, she presented the television program Studio MAX Live, together with Frank du Mosch. Dartell had been married since 1985 and had two sons. She lived in Florida for several years of her life. In 2020, she announced that, as in 2016, she had been diagnosed with lung cancer. Dartell died on 6 December 2023 from the consequences of this disease. She was 66. Shortly before her death, she returned to the Netherlands from the United States, hoping to be able to obtain euthanasia more easily.
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Priscilla Maria Regina Veltmeijer, known professionally as Cilly Dartell, was a Dutch radio and television presenter and actress. She is best known for presenting the program Hart van Nederland, which she presented from 1996 to 2012, as well as the program Shownieuws.
2023-12-07T02:52:26Z
2023-12-09T12:33:56Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cilly_Dartell
75,504,699
Rat Wars
Rat Wars is the sixth studio album by American noise rock band Health, released on December 7, 2023, through Loma Vista Recordings. It was produced by Stint and received positive reviews from critics. Rat Wars received a score of 69 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on five critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception. Olly Thomas of Kerrang! felt that the band "conjure their most effective rendering yet of their distinct aesthetic, a slick night drive through rainy neon-lit streets in search of answers to existential crises". Sputnikmusic's Simon K. called it "a record that's more cinematic, darker, louder, heavier and harder than anything we've heard from them before today", likening the experience of listening to the album on headphones to being "in a confined space with the band lobbing grenades into it". Reviewing the album for The Line of Best Fit, Jack Bray described it as "an album for every conceivable type of Health enjoyer" and found that its "amalgamation of sound" results in "Health arriv[ing] with their most scathing and sombre record yet". DIY's James Smurthwaite felt that the album "can wash past with as much staying power as candyfloss in a puddle" but its highlights "are reminders of Health at their vibrant and varied best, something that Rat Wars fails to consistently capture". Uncut wrote that while "the music is decent enough", "the problem is Jake Duszik's vocals, which are soft and blank of affect in a way that is oddly characterless. It leaves Rat Wars feeling, if not completely without merit, a bit of an empty vessel". Health Additional musicians Technical
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Rat Wars is the sixth studio album by American noise rock band Health, released on December 7, 2023, through Loma Vista Recordings. It was produced by Stint and received positive reviews from critics.
2023-12-07T02:59:08Z
2023-12-11T04:30:30Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_Wars
75,504,710
Red Light Management
Red Light Management is an international, independent music management company founded by Coran Capshaw. Coran Capshaw founded Red Light Management in 1991 in Charlottesville, VA, shortly before taking on the management of the Dave Matthews Band during its breakout period from local band to international touring group. Red Light has since developed global reach, with offices in London and multiple cities in the United States, managing artists such as Alicia Keys, Tim McGraw, Damian Marley, and Enrique Iglecias. The management group has been noted for its ability to navigate the changing landscape of concert tour promotion and other facets of the music management business since its founding.
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Red Light Management is an international, independent music management company founded by Coran Capshaw. Coran Capshaw founded Red Light Management in 1991 in Charlottesville, VA, shortly before taking on the management of the Dave Matthews Band during its breakout period from local band to international touring group. Red Light has since developed global reach, with offices in London and multiple cities in the United States, managing artists such as Alicia Keys, Tim McGraw, Damian Marley, and Enrique Iglecias. The management group has been noted for its ability to navigate the changing landscape of concert tour promotion and other facets of the music management business since its founding.
2023-12-07T03:00:14Z
2023-12-25T00:58:09Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Light_Management