id
int64 12
1.07M
| title
stringlengths 1
124
| text
stringlengths 0
228k
| paragraphs
list | abstract
stringlengths 0
123k
| date_created
stringlengths 0
20
| date_modified
stringlengths 20
20
| templates
sequence | url
stringlengths 31
154
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
75,515,279 | Nigerian military airstrikes on civilians | The Nigerian Military has carried out a number of airstrikes that claimed civilian lives in the country, which the government and the military explained as being erroneous or targeted non-state actors. These airstrikes happened in a number of states battling with insecurity as a result of terrorists' and bandits' activities. The recent of such attacks happened in Tudun Biri village of Kaduna state on Sunday 3 December 2023, when two military airstrikes hit the villagers celebrating an Islamic Festival which resulted in the death of more 120 according to Amnesty International.
In December 2023, two military airstrikes hit residents of Tudun Biri village of Kaduna state who were celebrating an Islamic Festival. The strikes resulted in the death of more 120 according to many sources including the Amnesty International. However, government sources indicated that the erroneous attacks killed 81 people.
In December 2022, an airstrike killed a number of civilians in Northern Nigeria Zamfara State while soldiers were repelling attacks by some bandits on some communities in the Dansadau District of Maru Local Government Area of the State. Although there is no official reports on the number of lost lives, some residents of the affected areas put the civilian casualties at over 70.
In July 2022, Nigerian Air Force jet's attack killed at least 6 people in the Kunkunna community of Safana Local Government of Katsina State, the bombs were reportedly targeted at bandits terrorizing the region.
Six children were reportedly killed when a Nigerian Air Force jet bombed their residence in Kurebe, Shiroro Local Government of Niger State in April 2022. According to local sources, the incident happened on the morning of Wednesday 13 April, as the children were returning from a motorised borehole in the community where they had gone to fetch water.
In January 2017, at least 52 people were killed after a Nigerian fighter jet erroneously dropped a bomb on an internally displaced persons camp in Rann, headquarters of Kala-Balge local government area, Borno State. According to a non-governmental organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) which reported the incidents in the first instance, another 120 people were injured from the incident. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Nigerian Military has carried out a number of airstrikes that claimed civilian lives in the country, which the government and the military explained as being erroneous or targeted non-state actors. These airstrikes happened in a number of states battling with insecurity as a result of terrorists' and bandits' activities. The recent of such attacks happened in Tudun Biri village of Kaduna state on Sunday 3 December 2023, when two military airstrikes hit the villagers celebrating an Islamic Festival which resulted in the death of more 120 according to Amnesty International.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In December 2023, two military airstrikes hit residents of Tudun Biri village of Kaduna state who were celebrating an Islamic Festival. The strikes resulted in the death of more 120 according to many sources including the Amnesty International. However, government sources indicated that the erroneous attacks killed 81 people.",
"title": "Airstrikes by Nigerian military on civilians"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In December 2022, an airstrike killed a number of civilians in Northern Nigeria Zamfara State while soldiers were repelling attacks by some bandits on some communities in the Dansadau District of Maru Local Government Area of the State. Although there is no official reports on the number of lost lives, some residents of the affected areas put the civilian casualties at over 70.",
"title": "Airstrikes by Nigerian military on civilians"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In July 2022, Nigerian Air Force jet's attack killed at least 6 people in the Kunkunna community of Safana Local Government of Katsina State, the bombs were reportedly targeted at bandits terrorizing the region.",
"title": "Airstrikes by Nigerian military on civilians"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Six children were reportedly killed when a Nigerian Air Force jet bombed their residence in Kurebe, Shiroro Local Government of Niger State in April 2022. According to local sources, the incident happened on the morning of Wednesday 13 April, as the children were returning from a motorised borehole in the community where they had gone to fetch water.",
"title": "Airstrikes by Nigerian military on civilians"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In January 2017, at least 52 people were killed after a Nigerian fighter jet erroneously dropped a bomb on an internally displaced persons camp in Rann, headquarters of Kala-Balge local government area, Borno State. According to a non-governmental organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) which reported the incidents in the first instance, another 120 people were injured from the incident.",
"title": "Airstrikes by Nigerian military on civilians"
}
] | The Nigerian Military has carried out a number of airstrikes that claimed civilian lives in the country, which the government and the military explained as being erroneous or targeted non-state actors. These airstrikes happened in a number of states battling with insecurity as a result of terrorists' and bandits' activities. The recent of such attacks happened in Tudun Biri village of Kaduna state on Sunday 3 December 2023, when two military airstrikes hit the villagers celebrating an Islamic Festival which resulted in the death of more 120 according to Amnesty International. | 2023-12-08T11:28:11Z | 2023-12-31T22:33:01Z | [
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Nigeria topics",
"Template:Military of Nigeria"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_military_airstrikes_on_civilians |
75,515,305 | 2018 SEA Tour Summer | The 2018 SEA Tour Summer, also known as Globe Conquerors Manila 2018 (GCM) is the new professional League of Legends league for the entire Southeast Asia region, replaces the Garena Premier League (GPL), with 8 teams from 5 countries participating to determine which team is the best in the region.
8 teams from 5 countries/areas
Matches are best of one
As of this edit, this article uses content from "Garena Premier League", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2018 SEA Tour Summer, also known as Globe Conquerors Manila 2018 (GCM) is the new professional League of Legends league for the entire Southeast Asia region, replaces the Garena Premier League (GPL), with 8 teams from 5 countries participating to determine which team is the best in the region.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "8 teams from 5 countries/areas",
"title": "Qualified teams"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Matches are best of one",
"title": "Results"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "Results"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "As of this edit, this article uses content from \"Garena Premier League\", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.",
"title": "External links"
}
] | The 2018 SEA Tour Summer, also known as Globe Conquerors Manila 2018 (GCM) is the new professional League of Legends league for the entire Southeast Asia region, replaces the Garena Premier League (GPL), with 8 teams from 5 countries participating to determine which team is the best in the region. | 2023-12-08T11:33:05Z | 2023-12-20T15:36:31Z | [
"Template:CCBYSASource",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox sport tournament",
"Template:Flag",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Professional League of Legends competition"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_SEA_Tour_Summer |
75,515,339 | St. James Church, Montclar | St. James Church is a Baroque church located in Montclar d'Urgell, in the municipality of Agramunt. It is a building included in the Inventory of the Architectural Heritage of Catalonia [ca].
The church is a single-nave church covered with a barrel vault, which opens with three side chapels through a half-point arch. Two small domes rise on each side of the transept. The main apse is polygonal. In the re-decoration there is a remarkable and innovative element for the churches of this period. There is a double tribune, one that communicates with the Montclar Castle, and another lower one corresponding to the church itself. The entrance to the church is at the foot of the west wall, through a large staircase and a semi-circular arch made of bricks. The bell tower is quadrangular and subdivided into three floors. On the first floor there are half-point openings that house the bells and on the top floor there is a clock on each face of the tower. It is made of perfectly cut regular ashlars and is crowned with a pyramidal roof.
Before this current church, there had been a medieval iteration of the church, possibly dedicated to Saint John. That is why it was built in the XVIII century on a previous church dedicated to Sant Joan. The church depended on Saint Peter of Àger [ca] until in the XIX century. To the east is the bell tower dated to 1628 in which there are two bells built in 1814. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "St. James Church is a Baroque church located in Montclar d'Urgell, in the municipality of Agramunt. It is a building included in the Inventory of the Architectural Heritage of Catalonia [ca].",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The church is a single-nave church covered with a barrel vault, which opens with three side chapels through a half-point arch. Two small domes rise on each side of the transept. The main apse is polygonal. In the re-decoration there is a remarkable and innovative element for the churches of this period. There is a double tribune, one that communicates with the Montclar Castle, and another lower one corresponding to the church itself. The entrance to the church is at the foot of the west wall, through a large staircase and a semi-circular arch made of bricks. The bell tower is quadrangular and subdivided into three floors. On the first floor there are half-point openings that house the bells and on the top floor there is a clock on each face of the tower. It is made of perfectly cut regular ashlars and is crowned with a pyramidal roof.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Before this current church, there had been a medieval iteration of the church, possibly dedicated to Saint John. That is why it was built in the XVIII century on a previous church dedicated to Sant Joan. The church depended on Saint Peter of Àger [ca] until in the XIX century. To the east is the bell tower dated to 1628 in which there are two bells built in 1814.",
"title": "History"
}
] | St. James Church is a Baroque church located in Montclar d'Urgell, in the municipality of Agramunt. It is a building included in the Inventory of the Architectural Heritage of Catalonia. | 2023-12-08T11:38:15Z | 2023-12-10T16:59:08Z | [
"Template:Infobox church",
"Template:Ill",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Webarchive",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:What"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._James_Church,_Montclar |
75,515,351 | Derek Zaba | Derek Zaba is an American attorney and advisor known for his expertise in shareholder activism and takeover defence. He is a partner and co-chair of the shareholder activism and corporate defense practice at Sidley Austin LLP.
Derek Zaba was raised in Downers Grove, IL. He received his bachelor’s degree in Engineering and Applied Science and his MBA degree cum laude from the Olin School of Business from Washington University in St. Louis in 1998. Later in 1998, he received his MBA degree from the Olin School of Business. In 2004, Zaba graduated Order of the Coif from Stanford Law School with a J.D. degree.
Zaba started his career as a business analyst at Capital One Financial Corporation in 1998. He worked as a legal intern for Linklaters LLP and Cravath and Swaine & Moore LLP, before joining Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz as an associate in 2004. In 2006, Zaba joined Scoggin Capital as a senior associate and analyst making event-driven investments in the global equity markets. He joined Voce Capital Management, an investment firm, in 2012, where he made activist investments in U.S. equities and became a Partner. In 2015, he joined PJT CamberView Partners, a shareholder engagement advisory firm, and served in various capacities, including as the head of the shareholder activism and takeover defence team. After CamberView Partners was acquired by PJT Partners, he joined Sidley Austin LLP as a partner and co-chair of shareholder activism and corporate defence practice.
His area of expertise includes corporate takeover defence and shareholder activism practice. In 2021, Derek was recognized by Chambers USA as the leading lawyer in mergers and acquisitions takeover defence. During Zaba’s tenure, Sidley Austin LLP rose to the top of the activism and corporate defense league tables of Bloomberg, FactSet and Refinitiv. The firm was also ranked in Band 1 for “Takeover Defense” by Chambers USA and in Tier 1 for “Shareholder Activism – Advice to Boards” by The Legal 500. Sidley Austin LLP has been recognized by The Deal as “Activist Defense Law Firm of the Year” multiple times. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Derek Zaba is an American attorney and advisor known for his expertise in shareholder activism and takeover defence. He is a partner and co-chair of the shareholder activism and corporate defense practice at Sidley Austin LLP.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Derek Zaba was raised in Downers Grove, IL. He received his bachelor’s degree in Engineering and Applied Science and his MBA degree cum laude from the Olin School of Business from Washington University in St. Louis in 1998. Later in 1998, he received his MBA degree from the Olin School of Business. In 2004, Zaba graduated Order of the Coif from Stanford Law School with a J.D. degree.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Zaba started his career as a business analyst at Capital One Financial Corporation in 1998. He worked as a legal intern for Linklaters LLP and Cravath and Swaine & Moore LLP, before joining Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz as an associate in 2004. In 2006, Zaba joined Scoggin Capital as a senior associate and analyst making event-driven investments in the global equity markets. He joined Voce Capital Management, an investment firm, in 2012, where he made activist investments in U.S. equities and became a Partner. In 2015, he joined PJT CamberView Partners, a shareholder engagement advisory firm, and served in various capacities, including as the head of the shareholder activism and takeover defence team. After CamberView Partners was acquired by PJT Partners, he joined Sidley Austin LLP as a partner and co-chair of shareholder activism and corporate defence practice.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "His area of expertise includes corporate takeover defence and shareholder activism practice. In 2021, Derek was recognized by Chambers USA as the leading lawyer in mergers and acquisitions takeover defence. During Zaba’s tenure, Sidley Austin LLP rose to the top of the activism and corporate defense league tables of Bloomberg, FactSet and Refinitiv. The firm was also ranked in Band 1 for “Takeover Defense” by Chambers USA and in Tier 1 for “Shareholder Activism – Advice to Boards” by The Legal 500. Sidley Austin LLP has been recognized by The Deal as “Activist Defense Law Firm of the Year” multiple times.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Derek Zaba is an American attorney and advisor known for his expertise in shareholder activism and takeover defence. He is a partner and co-chair of the shareholder activism and corporate defense practice at Sidley Austin LLP. | 2023-12-08T11:40:10Z | 2023-12-24T07:44:20Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derek_Zaba |
75,515,367 | Elizabeth Kilcoyne | Elizabeth Kilcoyne is an American William C Morris Award winning author of young adult fiction, playwright, and poet, best known for her debut novel Wake the Bones.
She was born and raised in Kentucky.
Kilcoyne says she has always been drawn to speculative stories, even though a lot of her work is grounded in reality. She was a 21-year-old college student when she wrote the first draft of her debut novel.
She has also been published in several literary journals. Kilycoyne currently lives in Lexington, Kentucky.
In Kilcoyne's debut, young adult Southern Gothic Wake the Bones, a teen returns home after dropping out of college and starts experiencing strange things in her hometown that she suspects are tied to her late mother's ghost. Kilcoyne says she was inspired to write the novel while on a walk through the woods. It was published by Wednesday Books in 2022 and a finalist for the William C. Morris Award. It received a starred review from Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weekly. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Elizabeth Kilcoyne is an American William C Morris Award winning author of young adult fiction, playwright, and poet, best known for her debut novel Wake the Bones.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She was born and raised in Kentucky.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Kilcoyne says she has always been drawn to speculative stories, even though a lot of her work is grounded in reality. She was a 21-year-old college student when she wrote the first draft of her debut novel.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She has also been published in several literary journals. Kilycoyne currently lives in Lexington, Kentucky.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In Kilcoyne's debut, young adult Southern Gothic Wake the Bones, a teen returns home after dropping out of college and starts experiencing strange things in her hometown that she suspects are tied to her late mother's ghost. Kilcoyne says she was inspired to write the novel while on a walk through the woods. It was published by Wednesday Books in 2022 and a finalist for the William C. Morris Award. It received a starred review from Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weekly.",
"title": "Wake the Bones"
}
] | Elizabeth Kilcoyne is an American William C Morris Award winning author of young adult fiction, playwright, and poet, best known for her debut novel Wake the Bones. | 2023-12-08T11:42:36Z | 2023-12-16T15:43:00Z | [
"Template:Infobox writer",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Kilcoyne |
75,515,371 | Siberian Collection of Peter the Great | The Siberian Collection of Peter the Great is a series of Saka Animal art gold artifacts that were discovered in Southern Siberia, from funeral kurgan tumuli, in mostly unrecorded locations in the area between modern Kazakhstan and the Altai mountains. The objects are generally dated to the 6th to the 1st centuries BCE.
The artifacts belong to the broadly-defined Scythian Animal style, and are relatively late examples of this kind of ornaments. They are generally attributed to the Saka culture.
Many of these artifacts were part of the archaeological presents sent by Matvey Gagarin [ru], Governor of Siberia based in the then capital of Siberia in Tobolsk, to Peter the Great in Saint-Petersburg in 1716. They are now located in the Hermitage Museum in Saint-Petersburg.
Many Saka kurgans were excavated in the 17th-18th century in the Ingala valley, and helped establish the Siberian Collection of Peter the Great. Most of the objects initially obtained by Peter the Great were looted from the area of Tobolsk, the capital of Siberia, just north of the Ingala valley.
The first explorers of the valley were so-called bugrovschiki [ru], robbers of ancient graves. In 1669, the governor of the Tobolsk rank [Wikidata] Petr Ivanovich Godunov told tsar Alexei Mikhailovich that gold, silver items and utensils were extracted from "Tatar graves" near the Iset River. As a result of the tomb robbers many treasures of the Siberian kurgans were lost forever. Some of the treasures extracted by bugrovschiki tomb robbers appeared in private collections abroad. The most famous was the collection of Amsterdam mayor Nicolaes Witsen; a part of it is known only from tables drawn in the third edition of his book Noord en Oost Tartatye (1785), and the collection was lost after 1717.
In 1712, a commander of Shadrinsk, prince Vasily Meshchersky, began excavations of kurgans to get gold, silver and copper items to replenish the state treasury by order of the Siberian governor prince Matvey Gagarin. During the years 1715-1717 governor Gagarin sent Siberian treasures to Peter the Great four times. 250 ancient gold jewelry pieces sent by Gagarin became known as the Siberian collection of Peter the Great, which is now available in the State Hermitage at the gallery of jewels called "The Scythian Gold".
Several of the objects from the Collection were painted in watercolor during the 1730s, which is helpfull in setting up a chronology of the Collection, and refines ideas about provenance. Many of these early objects are known to have been sent by M. P. Gagarin, governor of Siberia in Tobolsk, in 1716.
Daniel Messerschmidt, whose expedition into the Siberia Governorate took place in 1719-1727, was the first scientist to get acquainted with findings of the Ingala Valley. But Gerhard Müller, who visited Siberia in 1733-1743 together with the Great Northern Expedition, stated that tomb-robber activity was finished because the kurgans had been totally depleted.
The Imperial archives of the discoveries were kept in Tobolsk, but they were lost in a fire in 1788.
Large grave robbing activities by military commanders in the areas of Tomsk and Krasnoyarsk are also recorded.
After the initial complement from the area of Tobolsk, a large portion of the objects now in the Collection may then have come from the area of the Altai steppe, between the rivers Ob and Irtysh. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Siberian Collection of Peter the Great is a series of Saka Animal art gold artifacts that were discovered in Southern Siberia, from funeral kurgan tumuli, in mostly unrecorded locations in the area between modern Kazakhstan and the Altai mountains. The objects are generally dated to the 6th to the 1st centuries BCE.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The artifacts belong to the broadly-defined Scythian Animal style, and are relatively late examples of this kind of ornaments. They are generally attributed to the Saka culture.",
"title": "Characteristics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Many of these artifacts were part of the archaeological presents sent by Matvey Gagarin [ru], Governor of Siberia based in the then capital of Siberia in Tobolsk, to Peter the Great in Saint-Petersburg in 1716. They are now located in the Hermitage Museum in Saint-Petersburg.",
"title": "Characteristics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Many Saka kurgans were excavated in the 17th-18th century in the Ingala valley, and helped establish the Siberian Collection of Peter the Great. Most of the objects initially obtained by Peter the Great were looted from the area of Tobolsk, the capital of Siberia, just north of the Ingala valley.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The first explorers of the valley were so-called bugrovschiki [ru], robbers of ancient graves. In 1669, the governor of the Tobolsk rank [Wikidata] Petr Ivanovich Godunov told tsar Alexei Mikhailovich that gold, silver items and utensils were extracted from \"Tatar graves\" near the Iset River. As a result of the tomb robbers many treasures of the Siberian kurgans were lost forever. Some of the treasures extracted by bugrovschiki tomb robbers appeared in private collections abroad. The most famous was the collection of Amsterdam mayor Nicolaes Witsen; a part of it is known only from tables drawn in the third edition of his book Noord en Oost Tartatye (1785), and the collection was lost after 1717.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 1712, a commander of Shadrinsk, prince Vasily Meshchersky, began excavations of kurgans to get gold, silver and copper items to replenish the state treasury by order of the Siberian governor prince Matvey Gagarin. During the years 1715-1717 governor Gagarin sent Siberian treasures to Peter the Great four times. 250 ancient gold jewelry pieces sent by Gagarin became known as the Siberian collection of Peter the Great, which is now available in the State Hermitage at the gallery of jewels called \"The Scythian Gold\".",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Several of the objects from the Collection were painted in watercolor during the 1730s, which is helpfull in setting up a chronology of the Collection, and refines ideas about provenance. Many of these early objects are known to have been sent by M. P. Gagarin, governor of Siberia in Tobolsk, in 1716.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Daniel Messerschmidt, whose expedition into the Siberia Governorate took place in 1719-1727, was the first scientist to get acquainted with findings of the Ingala Valley. But Gerhard Müller, who visited Siberia in 1733-1743 together with the Great Northern Expedition, stated that tomb-robber activity was finished because the kurgans had been totally depleted.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "The Imperial archives of the discoveries were kept in Tobolsk, but they were lost in a fire in 1788.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Large grave robbing activities by military commanders in the areas of Tomsk and Krasnoyarsk are also recorded.",
"title": "Artifacts from the Ingala valley"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "After the initial complement from the area of Tobolsk, a large portion of the objects now in the Collection may then have come from the area of the Altai steppe, between the rivers Ob and Irtysh.",
"title": "Altai area"
}
] | The Siberian Collection of Peter the Great is a series of Saka Animal art gold artifacts that were discovered in Southern Siberia, from funeral kurgan tumuli, in mostly unrecorded locations in the area between modern Kazakhstan and the Altai mountains. The objects are generally dated to the 6th to the 1st centuries BCE. | 2023-12-08T11:43:25Z | 2023-12-14T12:55:29Z | [
"Template:Lang",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Infobox artefact",
"Template:Ill",
"Template:Illm",
"Template:Sfn",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Central Asian history",
"Template:Multiple image",
"Template:Saka kurgans",
"Template:Cite thesis"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_Collection_of_Peter_the_Great |
75,515,373 | Senate Constituency no. 42 | Senate Constituency no. 42 (Polish: Okręg wyborczy nr 42 do Senatu) is a single-member constituency for the Senate of Poland comprising five districts of the city of Warsaw: Praga-Południe, Praga-Północ, Rembertów, Targówek, Wesoła. Incumbent senator is Marek Borowski (Civic Platform) elected in 2023 parliamentary election. He has held the seat for four terms in a row since the constituency was established in 2011. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Senate Constituency no. 42 (Polish: Okręg wyborczy nr 42 do Senatu) is a single-member constituency for the Senate of Poland comprising five districts of the city of Warsaw: Praga-Południe, Praga-Północ, Rembertów, Targówek, Wesoła. Incumbent senator is Marek Borowski (Civic Platform) elected in 2023 parliamentary election. He has held the seat for four terms in a row since the constituency was established in 2011.",
"title": ""
}
] | Senate Constituency no. 42 is a single-member constituency for the Senate of Poland comprising five districts of the city of Warsaw: Praga-Południe, Praga-Północ, Rembertów, Targówek, Wesoła. Incumbent senator is Marek Borowski elected in 2023 parliamentary election. He has held the seat for four terms in a row since the constituency was established in 2011. | 2023-12-08T11:43:47Z | 2023-12-10T18:13:36Z | [
"Template:Party color cell",
"Template:Election results",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite Polish law",
"Template:Infobox constituency",
"Template:Lang-pl",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Constituencies of Poland",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Notelist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senate_Constituency_no._42 |
75,515,394 | Punjab Provincial Cooperative Bank Limited | The Punjab Provincial Cooperative Bank Limited (PPCBL), established in 1924, is one of the oldest banks in Pakistan. It has historically served as a specialized bank catering to the needs of housing and agricultural cooperatives.
PPCBL was established during the British rule and played a major role in providing agricultural credit after partition. However, over time, the bank faced financial challenges and bureaucratic problems.
PPCBL has a cricket team. In May 2023, the PPCBL cricket team defeated Lahore Gymkhana in a friendly match.
In May 2018, a notable scandal involving misappropriation of funds emerged, leading to legal action.
In July 2023 the bank, along with other banks, received fines for violations of the rules. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Punjab Provincial Cooperative Bank Limited (PPCBL), established in 1924, is one of the oldest banks in Pakistan. It has historically served as a specialized bank catering to the needs of housing and agricultural cooperatives.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "PPCBL was established during the British rule and played a major role in providing agricultural credit after partition. However, over time, the bank faced financial challenges and bureaucratic problems.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "PPCBL has a cricket team. In May 2023, the PPCBL cricket team defeated Lahore Gymkhana in a friendly match.",
"title": "Sports involvement"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In May 2018, a notable scandal involving misappropriation of funds emerged, leading to legal action.",
"title": "Legal issues"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In July 2023 the bank, along with other banks, received fines for violations of the rules.",
"title": "Legal issues"
}
] | The Punjab Provincial Cooperative Bank Limited (PPCBL), established in 1924, is one of the oldest banks in Pakistan. It has historically served as a specialized bank catering to the needs of housing and agricultural cooperatives. | 2023-12-08T11:47:05Z | 2023-12-08T11:57:02Z | [
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punjab_Provincial_Cooperative_Bank_Limited |
75,515,406 | Emily Baldwin (headmistress) | Emily Baldwin (1807 – 1880) was the first headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff.
She was born 18 September 1807 to a London publishing family. Her father was Robert Baldwin, founder of the London Magazine, and her mother was his relative Maria Baldwin, daughter of the publisher Henry Baldwin. She had six siblings.
She ran a school at Leamington and was head of a school in Notting Hill for fourteen years until she was appointed headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff, in 1860.
Baldwin was appointed 'chief matron' by a London court of chancery to run the newly opened charitable school for girls, which was finally opened in 1860 after Welsh merchant Thomas Howell had left an endowment for its foundation in 1537. She oversaw the teaching of thirty orphans and thirty fee-paying boarders, and the school soon began to take day pupils. The school taught "the principles of the Christian Religion, Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, English Grammar, Geography, Biography, History, the Elements of Astronomy, Garden Botany, Music, French, Drawing and such subjects as the Governors may direct".
Expanding the curriculum to include geometry, Italian and Latin; selecting books; and teaching herself, Baldwin established a good reputation for the newly founded school, and by the 1870s it was catering mainly to the middle classes. Her affection and gentle methods were noted by her obituary and the school’s historian.
Baldwin retired due to ill health in 1872. She spent the rest of her life living in London, with her sisters or in a series of lodgings, her finances limited by her father’s struggling publishing company. She died on 2 December 1880.
She is one of four headmistresses of Howell's School to have a school House named after her, along with Maria Kendall, Eleanor Trotter, and Margaret Lewis. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Emily Baldwin (1807 – 1880) was the first headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She was born 18 September 1807 to a London publishing family. Her father was Robert Baldwin, founder of the London Magazine, and her mother was his relative Maria Baldwin, daughter of the publisher Henry Baldwin. She had six siblings.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "She ran a school at Leamington and was head of a school in Notting Hill for fourteen years until she was appointed headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff, in 1860.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Baldwin was appointed 'chief matron' by a London court of chancery to run the newly opened charitable school for girls, which was finally opened in 1860 after Welsh merchant Thomas Howell had left an endowment for its foundation in 1537. She oversaw the teaching of thirty orphans and thirty fee-paying boarders, and the school soon began to take day pupils. The school taught \"the principles of the Christian Religion, Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, English Grammar, Geography, Biography, History, the Elements of Astronomy, Garden Botany, Music, French, Drawing and such subjects as the Governors may direct\".",
"title": "Howell's School"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Expanding the curriculum to include geometry, Italian and Latin; selecting books; and teaching herself, Baldwin established a good reputation for the newly founded school, and by the 1870s it was catering mainly to the middle classes. Her affection and gentle methods were noted by her obituary and the school’s historian.",
"title": "Howell's School"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Baldwin retired due to ill health in 1872. She spent the rest of her life living in London, with her sisters or in a series of lodgings, her finances limited by her father’s struggling publishing company. She died on 2 December 1880.",
"title": "Howell's School"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "She is one of four headmistresses of Howell's School to have a school House named after her, along with Maria Kendall, Eleanor Trotter, and Margaret Lewis.",
"title": "Howell's School"
}
] | Emily Baldwin was the first headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff. She was born 18 September 1807 to a London publishing family. Her father was Robert Baldwin, founder of the London Magazine, and her mother was his relative Maria Baldwin, daughter of the publisher Henry Baldwin. She had six siblings. She ran a school at Leamington and was head of a school in Notting Hill for fourteen years until she was appointed headmistress of Howell's School, Llandaff, in 1860. | 2023-12-08T11:50:45Z | 2023-12-26T14:35:54Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Baldwin_(headmistress) |
75,515,432 | Martin Nivyabadi | Martin Nivyabadi is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Good Governance, Privatization, General Inspection of the State and Local Administration in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Martin Nivyabadi is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Good Governance, Privatization, General Inspection of the State and Local Administration in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Martin Nivyabadi is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Good Governance, Privatization, General Inspection of the State and Local Administration in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T11:56:24Z | 2023-12-08T21:34:33Z | [
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Nivyabadi |
75,515,438 | Emmanuel Gikoro | Emmanuel Gikoro is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Emmanuel Gikoro is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Emmanuel Gikoro is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T11:58:23Z | 2023-12-08T21:32:36Z | [
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmanuel_Gikoro |
75,515,440 | Diagoras Chronopoulos | Diagoras Chronopoulos (1939-2015) was a Greek actor, director, cultural manager, producer, and acting teacher, recognized as one of the most significant artistic personalities of his generation.
He was born in Jerusalem, where his father served as a philologist, and returned to Greece with his family in 1948.
Chronopoulos studied Law at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and concurrently attended the Drama School of the "Art Theater" founded by Karolos Koun. In 1965, he moved to Paris, where he worked at the Théâtre populaire. From the early 1966 until 1971, he was in charge of the visual and auditory media department of ADEL S.A. advertising company.
Later in his career, Chronopoulos focused on producing films, documentaries, television series, and commercials for Greek television and cinema. He was arrested and imprisoned for his resistance activities against the regime of the colonels during the military dictatorship in Greece.
Chronopoulos held numerous public positions, such as the president of the Greek Directors' Society, the president of the Greek Advertising Film Producers Association, a board member of ERT S.A., and the director of Television of ET1. He also served as the General Secretary and the Deputy Artistic Director of the National Theater of Greece and as the artistic director of the National Theatre of Northern Greece.
As an actor, Chronopoulos appeared in several productions of the "Theatre of Art" and collaborated with various private theatrical troupes, also participating in Greek cinema. He was married twice, first to Eleni Mavili - Fotopoulou, with whom he had two children, and later to the actress and politician Eleni Kourkoula.
Diagoras Chronopoulos passed away on March 11, 2015, after a battle with cancer, at the age of 76. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Diagoras Chronopoulos (1939-2015) was a Greek actor, director, cultural manager, producer, and acting teacher, recognized as one of the most significant artistic personalities of his generation.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was born in Jerusalem, where his father served as a philologist, and returned to Greece with his family in 1948.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Chronopoulos studied Law at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and concurrently attended the Drama School of the \"Art Theater\" founded by Karolos Koun. In 1965, he moved to Paris, where he worked at the Théâtre populaire. From the early 1966 until 1971, he was in charge of the visual and auditory media department of ADEL S.A. advertising company.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Later in his career, Chronopoulos focused on producing films, documentaries, television series, and commercials for Greek television and cinema. He was arrested and imprisoned for his resistance activities against the regime of the colonels during the military dictatorship in Greece.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Chronopoulos held numerous public positions, such as the president of the Greek Directors' Society, the president of the Greek Advertising Film Producers Association, a board member of ERT S.A., and the director of Television of ET1. He also served as the General Secretary and the Deputy Artistic Director of the National Theater of Greece and as the artistic director of the National Theatre of Northern Greece.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "As an actor, Chronopoulos appeared in several productions of the \"Theatre of Art\" and collaborated with various private theatrical troupes, also participating in Greek cinema. He was married twice, first to Eleni Mavili - Fotopoulou, with whom he had two children, and later to the actress and politician Eleni Kourkoula.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Diagoras Chronopoulos passed away on March 11, 2015, after a battle with cancer, at the age of 76.",
"title": ""
}
] | Diagoras Chronopoulos (1939-2015) was a Greek actor, director, cultural manager, producer, and acting teacher, recognized as one of the most significant artistic personalities of his generation. He was born in Jerusalem, where his father served as a philologist, and returned to Greece with his family in 1948. Chronopoulos studied Law at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and concurrently attended the Drama School of the "Art Theater" founded by Karolos Koun. In 1965, he moved to Paris, where he worked at the Théâtre populaire. From the early 1966 until 1971, he was in charge of the visual and auditory media department of ADEL S.A. advertising company. Later in his career, Chronopoulos focused on producing films, documentaries, television series, and commercials for Greek television and cinema. He was arrested and imprisoned for his resistance activities against the regime of the colonels during the military dictatorship in Greece. Chronopoulos held numerous public positions, such as the president of the Greek Directors' Society, the president of the Greek Advertising Film Producers Association, a board member of ERT S.A., and the director of Television of ET1. He also served as the General Secretary and the Deputy Artistic Director of the National Theater of Greece and as the artistic director of the National Theatre of Northern Greece. As an actor, Chronopoulos appeared in several productions of the "Theatre of Art" and collaborated with various private theatrical troupes, also participating in Greek cinema. He was married twice, first to Eleni Mavili - Fotopoulou, with whom he had two children, and later to the actress and politician Eleni Kourkoula. Diagoras Chronopoulos passed away on March 11, 2015, after a battle with cancer, at the age of 76. | 2023-12-08T11:58:29Z | 2023-12-21T07:30:43Z | [
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagoras_Chronopoulos |
75,515,445 | Philippe Njoni | Philippe Njoni is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Philippe Njoni is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Philippe Njoni is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T11:59:40Z | 2023-12-20T05:00:24Z | [
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Njoni |
75,515,458 | Samuel Ndayiragije | Samuel Ndayiragije is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Water, Energy and Minerals in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Samuel Ndayiragije is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Water, Energy and Minerals in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Samuel Ndayiragije is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Water, Energy and Minerals in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T12:03:02Z | 2023-12-08T21:36:54Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Infobox officeholder"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Ndayiragije |
75,515,459 | 2022 Formula Nordic | The 2022 Formula Nordic season was the tenth season of the Swedish-based single-seater championship, and the fourth independent of the STCC branding, following the formation of the series' association in the wake of the STCC promoter's bankruptcy in 2018. Formula Nordic continues to use the previous Formula Renault 1.6 chassis and engines, as it used to go under the name of Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic before Renault Sport dropped its support for the 3.5 and 1.6 classes in late 2015. The season began on 13 May at Anderstorp Raceway, and concluded on 1 October at Mantorp Park after 15 races held over seven rounds. This was the second season with Yokohama as the series' tyre supplier.
The season began on 13 May at Anderstorp Raceway, and concluded on 1 October at Mantorp Park after 15 races held over seven rounds. For all rounds, the fastest time in qualifying clinched pole position for the first race, whereas the use of reversed grid races for the final race, where the top 6 were inverted, was continued. In three-race rounds, the 2nd fastest time in qualifying held pole position for the middle race.
Points are awarded to the top 5 fastest qualifying times.
Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers, no points are offered for fastest lap. The worst result for each driver is dropped from the final standings.
Two championships are held, the Junior Svenskt Mästerskap (JSM) for drivers under 26 years old holding a Swedish driver license, and the Formula Nordic Cup, the latter serving as the overall championship. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2022 Formula Nordic season was the tenth season of the Swedish-based single-seater championship, and the fourth independent of the STCC branding, following the formation of the series' association in the wake of the STCC promoter's bankruptcy in 2018. Formula Nordic continues to use the previous Formula Renault 1.6 chassis and engines, as it used to go under the name of Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic before Renault Sport dropped its support for the 3.5 and 1.6 classes in late 2015. The season began on 13 May at Anderstorp Raceway, and concluded on 1 October at Mantorp Park after 15 races held over seven rounds. This was the second season with Yokohama as the series' tyre supplier.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The season began on 13 May at Anderstorp Raceway, and concluded on 1 October at Mantorp Park after 15 races held over seven rounds. For all rounds, the fastest time in qualifying clinched pole position for the first race, whereas the use of reversed grid races for the final race, where the top 6 were inverted, was continued. In three-race rounds, the 2nd fastest time in qualifying held pole position for the middle race.",
"title": "Race calendar and results"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Points are awarded to the top 5 fastest qualifying times.",
"title": "Championship standings"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers, no points are offered for fastest lap. The worst result for each driver is dropped from the final standings.",
"title": "Championship standings"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Two championships are held, the Junior Svenskt Mästerskap (JSM) for drivers under 26 years old holding a Swedish driver license, and the Formula Nordic Cup, the latter serving as the overall championship.",
"title": "Championship standings"
}
] | The 2022 Formula Nordic season was the tenth season of the Swedish-based single-seater championship, and the fourth independent of the STCC branding, following the formation of the series' association in the wake of the STCC promoter's bankruptcy in 2018. Formula Nordic continues to use the previous Formula Renault 1.6 chassis and engines, as it used to go under the name of Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic before Renault Sport dropped its support for the 3.5 and 1.6 classes in late 2015. The season began on 13 May at Anderstorp Raceway, and concluded on 1 October at Mantorp Park after 15 races held over seven rounds. This was the second season with Yokohama as the series' tyre supplier. | 2023-12-08T12:03:03Z | 2023-12-19T15:37:07Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Motorsport season",
"Template:Tooltip",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:F1 driver results legend"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_Formula_Nordic |
75,515,465 | 2024 in Guam | Events from 2024 in the Guam.
Source: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events from 2024 in the Guam.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] | Events from 2024 in the Guam. | 2023-12-08T12:03:24Z | 2023-12-19T14:31:48Z | [
"Template:Small",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Oceania topic",
"Template:Year in Oceania",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Year in region",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Guam |
75,515,482 | Barnabe Mbonimpa | Barnabe Mbonimpa is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister at the Presidency in charge of AIDS in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Barnabe Mbonimpa is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister at the Presidency in charge of AIDS in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Barnabe Mbonimpa is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister at the Presidency in charge of AIDS in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T12:06:25Z | 2023-12-23T05:50:50Z | [
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnabe_Mbonimpa |
75,515,493 | Ferdinand Nderagakura | Ferdinand Nderagakura is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Agriculture and Livestock in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ferdinand Nderagakura is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Agriculture and Livestock in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Ferdinand Nderagakura is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Agriculture and Livestock in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T12:07:33Z | 2023-12-08T21:33:31Z | [
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Nderagakura |
75,515,501 | Euphrasie Bigirimana | Euphrasie Bigirimana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Deputy Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Euphrasie Bigirimana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Deputy Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Euphrasie Bigirimana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Deputy Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T12:08:57Z | 2023-12-21T04:27:27Z | [
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euphrasie_Bigirimana |
75,515,511 | Venant Kamana | Venant Kamana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Home Affairs and Communal Development in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Venant Kamana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Home Affairs and Communal Development in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007.",
"title": ""
}
] | Venant Kamana is a Burundian politician and educator. He was the former Minister of Home Affairs and Communal Development in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2007 by the former president of Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza. His term began on 14 November 2007. | 2023-12-08T12:10:27Z | 2023-12-20T04:46:04Z | [
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venant_Kamana |
75,515,527 | SLTEC Calaca Power Station | The SLTEC Calaca Power Station is a 270-MW coal-fired power station in Calaca, Batangas
The power plant was a project of South Luzon Thermal Corp. (SLTEC), a company jointly owned by Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Development Corp. of the PHINMA Group and AC Energy (ACEN) of the Ayala Group.
The first unit of SLTEC's coal power station in Calaca, Batangas became operational on April 24, 2015 and the second one on February 25, 2016.
By 2021, ACEN would acquire full stakes on SLTEC, acquiring the shares of Axia Power Holdings Philippines of Marubeni. ACEN would completely divest it shares on SLTEC in 2022, marking its full transition to renewable energy. This marks the commencement of the plant's early retirement by 2030. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The SLTEC Calaca Power Station is a 270-MW coal-fired power station in Calaca, Batangas",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The power plant was a project of South Luzon Thermal Corp. (SLTEC), a company jointly owned by Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Development Corp. of the PHINMA Group and AC Energy (ACEN) of the Ayala Group.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The first unit of SLTEC's coal power station in Calaca, Batangas became operational on April 24, 2015 and the second one on February 25, 2016.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "By 2021, ACEN would acquire full stakes on SLTEC, acquiring the shares of Axia Power Holdings Philippines of Marubeni. ACEN would completely divest it shares on SLTEC in 2022, marking its full transition to renewable energy. This marks the commencement of the plant's early retirement by 2030.",
"title": "History"
}
] | The SLTEC Calaca Power Station is a 270-MW coal-fired power station in Calaca, Batangas | 2023-12-08T12:14:17Z | 2023-12-11T01:34:36Z | [
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox power station",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SLTEC_Calaca_Power_Station |
75,515,537 | Gaspard Banyankimbona | Gaspard Banyankimbona is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Education and Scientific Research in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Gaspard Banyankimbona is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Education and Scientific Research in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020.",
"title": ""
}
] | Gaspard Banyankimbona is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Education and Scientific Research in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020. | 2023-12-08T12:16:39Z | 2023-12-08T21:33:38Z | [
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaspard_Banyankimbona |
75,515,543 | Thunderbirds Ladies | Thunderbirds Ladies F.C. is a women's professional soccer club based in Butterworth, Eastern Cape. The team competes in the SAFA Women's League, the top tier women's football league in South Africa.
In 2017, they won their first Eastern Cape Sasol League which qualified them to the 2017 Sasol League National Championship were they placed third overall.
The club defended their Eastern Cape Sasol League title in 2018 and competed in the 2018 Sasol League National Championship were they placed sixth overall. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Thunderbirds Ladies F.C. is a women's professional soccer club based in Butterworth, Eastern Cape. The team competes in the SAFA Women's League, the top tier women's football league in South Africa.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In 2017, they won their first Eastern Cape Sasol League which qualified them to the 2017 Sasol League National Championship were they placed third overall.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The club defended their Eastern Cape Sasol League title in 2018 and competed in the 2018 Sasol League National Championship were they placed sixth overall.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Thunderbirds Ladies F.C. is a women's professional soccer club based in Butterworth, Eastern Cape. The team competes in the SAFA Women's League, the top tier women's football league in South Africa. | 2023-12-08T12:17:29Z | 2023-12-29T19:41:47Z | [
"Template:Infobox football club",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunderbirds_Ladies |
75,515,545 | Ezekiel Nibigira | Ezekiel Nibigira is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of East African Community Affairs, Youth, Sports and Culture in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ezekiel Nibigira is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of East African Community Affairs, Youth, Sports and Culture in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020.",
"title": ""
}
] | Ezekiel Nibigira is a Burundian politician and educator. He is the current Minister of East African Community Affairs, Youth, Sports and Culture in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. His term began on 28 June 2020. | 2023-12-08T12:18:01Z | 2023-12-08T21:31:25Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezekiel_Nibigira |
75,515,551 | Thaddée Ndikumana | Thaddée Ndikumana is a Burundian politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. Her term began on 28 June 2020. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Thaddée Ndikumana is a Burundian politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. Her term began on 28 June 2020.",
"title": ""
}
] | Thaddée Ndikumana is a Burundian politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Public Health and HIV/Aids fight in Burundi, having been appointed to the position in 2020 by the current president of Burundi, Évariste Ndayishimiye. Her term began on 28 June 2020. | 2023-12-08T12:19:24Z | 2023-12-08T21:37:12Z | [
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:Burundi-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thadd%C3%A9e_Ndikumana |
75,515,597 | Isabella Epiu | Isabella Epiu is a Ugandan anesthesiologist and critical care medicine specialist who is reported to be the first female anesthesiologist in the countries of the East African Community, to graduate with a Doctor of Philosophy degree. In 2023, she graduated from the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia with a PhD in Medicine, specializing in neuro-respiratory physiology and health economics.
She is a Ugandan national by birth, born in Ngora District circa 1976. Her father is Pastor Richard Honorat Epiu. She excelled in primary and middle schools in her home district before transferring a high school in Kampala. She was then admitted into Makerere University School of Medicine, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degree. She went on to obtain a Master of Medicine (MMed) degree in Anesthesiology from the same medical school.
She then won a scholarship from the National Institutes of Health to undertake a one-year Fellowship at the University of California Global Health Institute, based in the city of San Francisco. Her doctoral program in medicine and health economics (PhD), was conducted at the Prince of Wales Hospital (Sydney), at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.
As of December 2023, her competencies include anesthesia, critical care medicine, emergency medicine, intensive care, and pain medicine. At that time, she was a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Anesthesia at the Kabale University School of Medicine, in the city of Kabale, in the Western Region of Uganda.
Epiu has been an advocate for equitable access to safe obstetric anesthesia and perinatal outcomes. Her original research in the countries of the East African community drew attention to wide service gaps in this area. Her more in-depth evaluation of 64 mid-level hospitals in Uganda, opened a wider exposure of the problems. She has written newspaper articles in East African print media, drawing attention to the dire need for improvement in these areas. As a result of her advocacy, the Society of Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology (SOAP), based in Lexington, Kentucky, recognized her with the 2016 SOAP Media Award.
Since 2012, she has conducted research in maternal morbidity and mortality in the East African countries of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda. Later, she extended her research to 64 Ugandan hospitals. As a result of her research, she won several awards including an NIH Fogarty Scholarship. She is also the founder and director of Health Solutions International, a non-government organization. In addition, she is a Mandela Washington Fellow, part of the Young African Leaders Initiative program.
She has multiple publications in the areas of her specialization. In December 2023, the government of Uganda organized a special event at Kololo Independence Ground to celebrate Epiu's acquisition of a PhD. The chief guest at the event was the president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, who was represented by the vice president, Jessica Alupo. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Isabella Epiu is a Ugandan anesthesiologist and critical care medicine specialist who is reported to be the first female anesthesiologist in the countries of the East African Community, to graduate with a Doctor of Philosophy degree. In 2023, she graduated from the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia with a PhD in Medicine, specializing in neuro-respiratory physiology and health economics.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She is a Ugandan national by birth, born in Ngora District circa 1976. Her father is Pastor Richard Honorat Epiu. She excelled in primary and middle schools in her home district before transferring a high school in Kampala. She was then admitted into Makerere University School of Medicine, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degree. She went on to obtain a Master of Medicine (MMed) degree in Anesthesiology from the same medical school.",
"title": "Background and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "She then won a scholarship from the National Institutes of Health to undertake a one-year Fellowship at the University of California Global Health Institute, based in the city of San Francisco. Her doctoral program in medicine and health economics (PhD), was conducted at the Prince of Wales Hospital (Sydney), at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.",
"title": "Background and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "As of December 2023, her competencies include anesthesia, critical care medicine, emergency medicine, intensive care, and pain medicine. At that time, she was a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Anesthesia at the Kabale University School of Medicine, in the city of Kabale, in the Western Region of Uganda.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Epiu has been an advocate for equitable access to safe obstetric anesthesia and perinatal outcomes. Her original research in the countries of the East African community drew attention to wide service gaps in this area. Her more in-depth evaluation of 64 mid-level hospitals in Uganda, opened a wider exposure of the problems. She has written newspaper articles in East African print media, drawing attention to the dire need for improvement in these areas. As a result of her advocacy, the Society of Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology (SOAP), based in Lexington, Kentucky, recognized her with the 2016 SOAP Media Award.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Since 2012, she has conducted research in maternal morbidity and mortality in the East African countries of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda. Later, she extended her research to 64 Ugandan hospitals. As a result of her research, she won several awards including an NIH Fogarty Scholarship. She is also the founder and director of Health Solutions International, a non-government organization. In addition, she is a Mandela Washington Fellow, part of the Young African Leaders Initiative program.",
"title": "Other considerations"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "She has multiple publications in the areas of her specialization. In December 2023, the government of Uganda organized a special event at Kololo Independence Ground to celebrate Epiu's acquisition of a PhD. The chief guest at the event was the president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, who was represented by the vice president, Jessica Alupo.",
"title": "Other considerations"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "External links"
}
] | Isabella Epiu is a Ugandan anesthesiologist and critical care medicine specialist who is reported to be the first female anesthesiologist in the countries of the East African Community, to graduate with a Doctor of Philosophy degree. In 2023, she graduated from the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia with a PhD in Medicine, specializing in neuro-respiratory physiology and health economics. | 2023-12-08T12:32:16Z | 2023-12-28T15:46:27Z | [
"Template:Notability",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:EngvarB",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_Epiu |
75,515,603 | Shona Haldane, Lady Haldane | Shona Haldane, Lady Haldane is a Scottish judge who has been a Senator of the College of Justice since 2021. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Shona Haldane, Lady Haldane is a Scottish judge who has been a Senator of the College of Justice since 2021.",
"title": ""
}
] | Shona Haldane, Lady Haldane is a Scottish judge who has been a Senator of the College of Justice since 2021. | 2023-12-08T12:33:55Z | 2023-12-08T15:59:45Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shona_Haldane,_Lady_Haldane |
75,515,608 | Pune Riverfront | Pune Riverfront is an under-construction waterfront being developed by Pune Municipal Corporation along the banks of Mula-Mutha River in Pune, India. Proposed in the 2000s, the construction of the project has began in 2022.
In 2022, the Pune Municipal Corporation, has given its nod to spend over ₹5,500 crore (US$690 million) on the improvement and beautification of the Mula-Mutha river in the coming years, in this two mega projects including development of the riverfront (total Rs:4,000 crore) and rejuvenation of the river (total Rs:1,500 crore) will take place. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Pune Riverfront is an under-construction waterfront being developed by Pune Municipal Corporation along the banks of Mula-Mutha River in Pune, India. Proposed in the 2000s, the construction of the project has began in 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In 2022, the Pune Municipal Corporation, has given its nod to spend over ₹5,500 crore (US$690 million) on the improvement and beautification of the Mula-Mutha river in the coming years, in this two mega projects including development of the riverfront (total Rs:4,000 crore) and rejuvenation of the river (total Rs:1,500 crore) will take place.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Pune Riverfront is an under-construction waterfront being developed by Pune Municipal Corporation along the banks of Mula-Mutha River in Pune, India. Proposed in the 2000s, the construction of the project has began in 2022. | 2023-12-08T12:34:28Z | 2023-12-25T14:02:26Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Infobox urban development project",
"Template:INRConvert",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pune_Riverfront |
75,515,614 | EconomyBookings | EconomyBookings is an online car rental broker owned by Booking Group and based in Riga, Latvia. EconomyBookings works with more than 150 countries and over 20 000 locations across the world.
EconomyBookings was founded by two former rowing athletes, Alen Baibekov and Igor Demchakov, in 2008, in Riga, Latvia. Previously, they worked in the car rental industry. In June 2022, in the report ordered by the Bank of Latvia, Booking Group Corporation entered the "Top 10" Latvian export service companies.
EconomyBookings, as a website owned by Booking Group, functions as an aggregator for various global and local car hire companies. Booking Group is the provision of car rental mediation services in the Internet environment using the Internet platform "Economybooking.com." Cooperating with more than 850 car rental companies worldwide, among its largest partners are Enterprise Holdings, Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group, Europcar, and Sixt.
The company employs relatively small number of people having only 65 as was mentioned in 2018. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "EconomyBookings is an online car rental broker owned by Booking Group and based in Riga, Latvia. EconomyBookings works with more than 150 countries and over 20 000 locations across the world.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "EconomyBookings was founded by two former rowing athletes, Alen Baibekov and Igor Demchakov, in 2008, in Riga, Latvia. Previously, they worked in the car rental industry. In June 2022, in the report ordered by the Bank of Latvia, Booking Group Corporation entered the \"Top 10\" Latvian export service companies.",
"title": "Overview"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "EconomyBookings, as a website owned by Booking Group, functions as an aggregator for various global and local car hire companies. Booking Group is the provision of car rental mediation services in the Internet environment using the Internet platform \"Economybooking.com.\" Cooperating with more than 850 car rental companies worldwide, among its largest partners are Enterprise Holdings, Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group, Europcar, and Sixt.",
"title": "Overview"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The company employs relatively small number of people having only 65 as was mentioned in 2018.",
"title": "Overview"
}
] | EconomyBookings is an online car rental broker owned by Booking Group and based in Riga, Latvia. EconomyBookings works with more than 150 countries and over 20 000 locations across the world. | 2023-12-08T12:36:19Z | 2023-12-31T23:51:38Z | [
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Infobox company",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite journal"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EconomyBookings |
75,515,622 | Wonka (soundtrack) | Wonka (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2023 musical fantasy film of the same name co-written and directed by Paul King, who co-written with Simon Farnaby. Based on the origin story of Willy Wonka, a character in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, the film stars Timothée Chalamet in the lead role who leads an ensemble cast. The album features seven original songs composed by Neil Hannon and written by King and Farnaby, further accompanied by the cues from the original score composed by Joby Talbot. The songs are performed by the cast members, including Chalamet (in his singing debut). The soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on 8 December 2023.
Neil Hannon, frontman of the Divine Comedy, provided seven original songs for the film in his Hollywood debut. The songs were composed in mid-2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and was recorded at the Abbey Road Studios in London. Joby Talbot scored the incidental music for the film which was recorded at the Abbey Road and Air Studios in May 2023. The soundtrack also featured Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley's "Pure Imagination" and "Oompa Loompa" from Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971).
Wonka marked Chalamet's debut as a playback singer, who described it as "out of his league". King's casting of Chalamet was attributed to his musical theatre performances at high school, which he found on YouTube having thousands of views, knowing that he could sing and dance really well. King, who appreciated Chalamet's singing voice, called it reminiscent of Bing Crosby; in an interview in The Hollywood Reporter, he said, "There's quite a range because it does go from a couple of bigger, showstopper-y sort of things, to moments of real, pure emotion, and he can do it all... I'm going to sound like a crazed fan."
Although the full track list was not revealed, in November 2023, Warner Bros. submitted the original song "A World of Your Own" performed by Chalamet, composed by Hannon and written by King and Farnaby, as a contender for the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 96th Academy Awards. On 14 November 2023, a sneak peek of Chalamet singing "Pure Imagination" from the 1971 film was released, further revealing that it would be featured in the film and the album. The soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on 8 December 2023, a week prior to the United States release. The album is planned to be released on CD and vinyl in 2024.
Ross Bonaime of Collider wrote "Music was key to bringing Willy Wonka to the screen in 1971, and while the songs here aren’t quite to the level of that original film, they are toe-tapping fun in the theater and Hannon does a solid job with the musical numbers throughout." David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter called Neil Hannon's musical numbers being "serviceable" but "there’s little of the sophisticated lyrical wit of the Northern Irish orchestral pop band's best work" with the catchiest being "A World of Your Own"; he reviewed Talbot's score as "playful" and "smoothly integrated with the songs". Tim Grierson of Screen International wrote that Talbot's "wistful score cannily weaves in trace elements of" the track "Pure Imagination" from the 1971 film connecting the prequel. Also opining the same, Entertainment Weekly critic Mauren Lee Lenker also addressed that the first film's "Pure Imagination" and "Oompa Loompa" are the "best musical moments from the film". Julian Roman of MovieWeb wrote "Kudos to composer Joby Talbot (Sing franchise) and songwriter Neil Hannon, from Irish band The Divine Comedy, for a swinging soundtrack [...] The music wisely hearkens back to the styling of Mel Stuart's Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. The songs aren't edgy and dark like Tim Burton's 2005 adaptation." | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Wonka (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2023 musical fantasy film of the same name co-written and directed by Paul King, who co-written with Simon Farnaby. Based on the origin story of Willy Wonka, a character in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, the film stars Timothée Chalamet in the lead role who leads an ensemble cast. The album features seven original songs composed by Neil Hannon and written by King and Farnaby, further accompanied by the cues from the original score composed by Joby Talbot. The songs are performed by the cast members, including Chalamet (in his singing debut). The soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on 8 December 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Neil Hannon, frontman of the Divine Comedy, provided seven original songs for the film in his Hollywood debut. The songs were composed in mid-2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and was recorded at the Abbey Road Studios in London. Joby Talbot scored the incidental music for the film which was recorded at the Abbey Road and Air Studios in May 2023. The soundtrack also featured Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley's \"Pure Imagination\" and \"Oompa Loompa\" from Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971).",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Wonka marked Chalamet's debut as a playback singer, who described it as \"out of his league\". King's casting of Chalamet was attributed to his musical theatre performances at high school, which he found on YouTube having thousands of views, knowing that he could sing and dance really well. King, who appreciated Chalamet's singing voice, called it reminiscent of Bing Crosby; in an interview in The Hollywood Reporter, he said, \"There's quite a range because it does go from a couple of bigger, showstopper-y sort of things, to moments of real, pure emotion, and he can do it all... I'm going to sound like a crazed fan.\"",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Although the full track list was not revealed, in November 2023, Warner Bros. submitted the original song \"A World of Your Own\" performed by Chalamet, composed by Hannon and written by King and Farnaby, as a contender for the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 96th Academy Awards. On 14 November 2023, a sneak peek of Chalamet singing \"Pure Imagination\" from the 1971 film was released, further revealing that it would be featured in the film and the album. The soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on 8 December 2023, a week prior to the United States release. The album is planned to be released on CD and vinyl in 2024.",
"title": "Release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Ross Bonaime of Collider wrote \"Music was key to bringing Willy Wonka to the screen in 1971, and while the songs here aren’t quite to the level of that original film, they are toe-tapping fun in the theater and Hannon does a solid job with the musical numbers throughout.\" David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter called Neil Hannon's musical numbers being \"serviceable\" but \"there’s little of the sophisticated lyrical wit of the Northern Irish orchestral pop band's best work\" with the catchiest being \"A World of Your Own\"; he reviewed Talbot's score as \"playful\" and \"smoothly integrated with the songs\". Tim Grierson of Screen International wrote that Talbot's \"wistful score cannily weaves in trace elements of\" the track \"Pure Imagination\" from the 1971 film connecting the prequel. Also opining the same, Entertainment Weekly critic Mauren Lee Lenker also addressed that the first film's \"Pure Imagination\" and \"Oompa Loompa\" are the \"best musical moments from the film\". Julian Roman of MovieWeb wrote \"Kudos to composer Joby Talbot (Sing franchise) and songwriter Neil Hannon, from Irish band The Divine Comedy, for a swinging soundtrack [...] The music wisely hearkens back to the styling of Mel Stuart's Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. The songs aren't edgy and dark like Tim Burton's 2005 adaptation.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] | Wonka is the soundtrack to the 2023 musical fantasy film of the same name co-written and directed by Paul King, who co-written with Simon Farnaby. Based on the origin story of Willy Wonka, a character in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, the film stars Timothée Chalamet in the lead role who leads an ensemble cast. The album features seven original songs composed by Neil Hannon and written by King and Farnaby, further accompanied by the cues from the original score composed by Joby Talbot. The songs are performed by the cast members, including Chalamet. The soundtrack was released by WaterTower Music on 8 December 2023. | 2023-12-08T12:38:32Z | 2023-12-30T00:00:52Z | [
"Template:Album chart",
"Template:Ref heading",
"Template:Nominated",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite magazine",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox album",
"Template:Track listing",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Charlie and the Chocolate Factory"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonka_(soundtrack) |
75,515,629 | Güstrow Speedway Stadium | The Güstrow Speedway Stadium (German: Speedwaystadion Güstrow) is an 8,000-capacity speedway stadium in Güstrow, Germany. The stadium is located on the eastern outskirts of the town, just off the Plauer Chaussee 4.
The speedway track has a circumference of 298 metres and is home to the speedway team MC Güstrow.
In 1963, Fritz Suhrbier was attributed as to creating the stadium from an old sand and waste area. He constructed a motocross course with a speedway track inside the motocross course. Diethelm Triemer, an East German international rider, officiated at the first race on 20 October 1963.
in 1970, the stadium hosted a Continental Semi final of the 1970 Speedway World Team Cup.
Being in East Germany the stadium suffered from political isolation because of the Iron Curtain but many years later in 2008, it was selected to host the semi final of the Team Speedway Junior European Championship.
Piotr Protasiewicz set a track record time of 56.5 seconds on 12 August 2007.
From 2014 to 2019, the stadium hosted one of the finals of the Individual Speedway European Championship. It did not hold the event in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, it returned in 2021 and been held every year since. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Güstrow Speedway Stadium (German: Speedwaystadion Güstrow) is an 8,000-capacity speedway stadium in Güstrow, Germany. The stadium is located on the eastern outskirts of the town, just off the Plauer Chaussee 4.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The speedway track has a circumference of 298 metres and is home to the speedway team MC Güstrow.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1963, Fritz Suhrbier was attributed as to creating the stadium from an old sand and waste area. He constructed a motocross course with a speedway track inside the motocross course. Diethelm Triemer, an East German international rider, officiated at the first race on 20 October 1963.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "in 1970, the stadium hosted a Continental Semi final of the 1970 Speedway World Team Cup.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Being in East Germany the stadium suffered from political isolation because of the Iron Curtain but many years later in 2008, it was selected to host the semi final of the Team Speedway Junior European Championship.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Piotr Protasiewicz set a track record time of 56.5 seconds on 12 August 2007.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "From 2014 to 2019, the stadium hosted one of the finals of the Individual Speedway European Championship. It did not hold the event in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, it returned in 2021 and been held every year since.",
"title": "History"
}
] | The Güstrow Speedway Stadium is an 8,000-capacity speedway stadium in Güstrow, Germany. The stadium is located on the eastern outskirts of the town, just off the Plauer Chaussee 4. The speedway track has a circumference of 298 metres and is home to the speedway team MC Güstrow. | 2023-12-08T12:42:07Z | 2023-12-08T12:42:07Z | [
"Template:Motorcycle speedway tracks",
"Template:Motorcycle-speedway-stub",
"Template:Infobox motorsport venue",
"Template:Lang-de",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use British English"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%BCstrow_Speedway_Stadium |
75,515,632 | Ferdinand Ouedraogo | Ferdinand Ouedraogo is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Chief of Staff in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ferdinand Ouedraogo is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Chief of Staff in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] | Ferdinand Ouedraogo is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Chief of Staff in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | 2023-12-08T12:42:25Z | 2023-12-20T15:20:16Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Burkina Faso-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Ouedraogo |
75,515,642 | Barbara Blackmun | Barbara Winston Blackmun (June 29, 1928 – July 6, 2018) was an art historian, professor, and museum director from the United States. She specialized in Nigerian antiquities, including Nok terracottas, the bronzes of Ife, and the bronzes and ivories of the Kingdom of Benin in Nigeria. She was also known for her early use of computer analysis for motif identification and interpretation in African art.
Barbara Winston was born in Merced, California, on June 29, 1928. She spent her early years in national parks where her father managed camps for the Civilian Conservation Corps. She obtained her BFA in Fine Arts and a teaching certificate from UCLA in 1949. In 1951, she married Rupert Beall Blackmun, with whom she had three children.
She started her career as a public school teacher in Trona, California, in the Mojave Desert, where she taught art, music, and drama. After relocating to San Diego, she taught at various elementary and junior high schools. Her fascination with African art began after visiting the San Diego Museum of Man and observing its collection of African masks.
She decided to advance her education in art history and enrolled at Arizona State University, earning her MA in 1971. Her thesis focused on Maravi masks from Malawi. She then joined the faculty of San Diego Mesa College, where she taught art history and humanities courses from 1971 to 2010.
Blackmun's initial encounter with Africa occurred in Malawi with her family in the late 1960s, where she held teaching roles at Malawi Polytechnic College and the University of Malawi. She also traveled with her husband to Saudi Arabia and Iran for his extended projects.
She started her PhD program in African art history at UCLA in 1978, guided by Arnold Rubin. She collaborated with archaeologist Frank Willett on Nigerian antiquities in 1978/79, and conducted interviews with numerous chiefs and guild members in Benin City in 1981/82, including the late Ine of Igbesanmwan, Chief David Omoregie. She was granted a Fulbright grant to support her research, and also participated in a special UCLA seminar on Benin art, taught by Rubin and Paula Girshick, a Benin specialist.
She completed her dissertation in 1984, which was notable for its analysis of the over 130 extant ivory tusks that once adorned royal ancestral altars in Benin City. She was among the first scholars to focus on Benin tusks and ivories for examination, and to employ a computer for motif analysis and interpretation. She established an iconographical "dictionary" that has been a resource for subsequent students of Benin art.
She conducted research on other Nigerian art forms, such as Nok terracottas and Ife bronzes. She was granted a National Endowment for the Humanities grant in 1986 to study the Nok culture.
She also served as the director of the San Diego Museum of Man from 1988 to 1990, where she supervised the renovation of the museum's African gallery and the installation of a new exhibition on the history of human evolution. She was also a founding member and president of the Arts Council for the African Studies Association (ACASA), an organization that promotes the study and appreciation of African art and culture.
She retired from teaching in 2010, but remained active in the field of African art history. She continued to publish articles, give lectures, and attend conferences. She also maintained a website where she shared her research and photographs of African art. She received the ACASA Leadership Award in 2008, in recognition of her contributions to the field.
She died on July 6, 2018, in Lexington, Kentucky, at the age of 90. She was survived by her husband, three children, and six grandchildren. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Barbara Winston Blackmun (June 29, 1928 – July 6, 2018) was an art historian, professor, and museum director from the United States. She specialized in Nigerian antiquities, including Nok terracottas, the bronzes of Ife, and the bronzes and ivories of the Kingdom of Benin in Nigeria. She was also known for her early use of computer analysis for motif identification and interpretation in African art.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Barbara Winston was born in Merced, California, on June 29, 1928. She spent her early years in national parks where her father managed camps for the Civilian Conservation Corps. She obtained her BFA in Fine Arts and a teaching certificate from UCLA in 1949. In 1951, she married Rupert Beall Blackmun, with whom she had three children.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "She started her career as a public school teacher in Trona, California, in the Mojave Desert, where she taught art, music, and drama. After relocating to San Diego, she taught at various elementary and junior high schools. Her fascination with African art began after visiting the San Diego Museum of Man and observing its collection of African masks.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She decided to advance her education in art history and enrolled at Arizona State University, earning her MA in 1971. Her thesis focused on Maravi masks from Malawi. She then joined the faculty of San Diego Mesa College, where she taught art history and humanities courses from 1971 to 2010.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Blackmun's initial encounter with Africa occurred in Malawi with her family in the late 1960s, where she held teaching roles at Malawi Polytechnic College and the University of Malawi. She also traveled with her husband to Saudi Arabia and Iran for his extended projects.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "She started her PhD program in African art history at UCLA in 1978, guided by Arnold Rubin. She collaborated with archaeologist Frank Willett on Nigerian antiquities in 1978/79, and conducted interviews with numerous chiefs and guild members in Benin City in 1981/82, including the late Ine of Igbesanmwan, Chief David Omoregie. She was granted a Fulbright grant to support her research, and also participated in a special UCLA seminar on Benin art, taught by Rubin and Paula Girshick, a Benin specialist.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "She completed her dissertation in 1984, which was notable for its analysis of the over 130 extant ivory tusks that once adorned royal ancestral altars in Benin City. She was among the first scholars to focus on Benin tusks and ivories for examination, and to employ a computer for motif analysis and interpretation. She established an iconographical \"dictionary\" that has been a resource for subsequent students of Benin art.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "She conducted research on other Nigerian art forms, such as Nok terracottas and Ife bronzes. She was granted a National Endowment for the Humanities grant in 1986 to study the Nok culture.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "She also served as the director of the San Diego Museum of Man from 1988 to 1990, where she supervised the renovation of the museum's African gallery and the installation of a new exhibition on the history of human evolution. She was also a founding member and president of the Arts Council for the African Studies Association (ACASA), an organization that promotes the study and appreciation of African art and culture.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "She retired from teaching in 2010, but remained active in the field of African art history. She continued to publish articles, give lectures, and attend conferences. She also maintained a website where she shared her research and photographs of African art. She received the ACASA Leadership Award in 2008, in recognition of her contributions to the field.",
"title": "Career and research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "She died on July 6, 2018, in Lexington, Kentucky, at the age of 90. She was survived by her husband, three children, and six grandchildren.",
"title": "Career and research"
}
] | Barbara Winston Blackmun was an art historian, professor, and museum director from the United States. She specialized in Nigerian antiquities, including Nok terracottas, the bronzes of Ife, and the bronzes and ivories of the Kingdom of Benin in Nigeria. She was also known for her early use of computer analysis for motif identification and interpretation in African art. | 2023-12-08T12:43:18Z | 2023-12-12T00:46:25Z | [
"Template:Refend",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite magazine",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Refbegin",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:About",
"Template:Sfn",
"Template:Cite journal"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Blackmun |
75,515,645 | List of FC Neftchi Fergana players | FC Neftchi Fergana is an Uzbek professional football club based in Fergana, Uzbekistan. The club was formed on 1962 in Fergana. From 1962 to 1991 Neftchi played in different leagues of USSR. From 1992 club has played in the highest Uzbek Football Division, Uzbek League. The club plays its matches at Istiklol Stadium. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "FC Neftchi Fergana is an Uzbek professional football club based in Fergana, Uzbekistan. The club was formed on 1962 in Fergana. From 1962 to 1991 Neftchi played in different leagues of USSR. From 1992 club has played in the highest Uzbek Football Division, Uzbek League. The club plays its matches at Istiklol Stadium.",
"title": ""
}
] | FC Neftchi Fergana is an Uzbek professional football club based in Fergana, Uzbekistan. The club was formed on 1962 in Fergana. From 1962 to 1991 Neftchi played in different leagues of USSR. From 1992 club has played in the highest Uzbek Football Division, Uzbek League. The club plays its matches at Istiklol Stadium. | 2023-12-08T12:43:23Z | 2023-12-12T20:11:02Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Updated",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:About",
"Template:Tooltip",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:In lang"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_FC_Neftchi_Fergana_players |
75,515,661 | Kassoum Coulibaly | Kassoum Coulibaly is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Defense and Veterans Affairs in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kassoum Coulibaly is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Defense and Veterans Affairs in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] | Kassoum Coulibaly is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Defense and Veterans Affairs in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | 2023-12-08T12:46:56Z | 2023-12-20T15:22:00Z | [
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Burkina Faso-politician-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kassoum_Coulibaly |
75,515,672 | SS Katowice | SS Katowice, originally named SS Vendemiare, was a 1925 built 82 metres long Polish merchant steamship. It was owned by Polish Ocean Lines and had hometown Gdynia.
The ship served during World War II, including at Normandy landings.
On 1 March 1949 the ship wrecked on Terschelling, the Netherlands. The crew members were rescued.
The ship had an iron hull, and measured 82.4m x 12.2m and had a height of 5.5m. She was assessed at 1995 BRT. The ship had one 2-cylinder compound steam engine a single shaft, one screw and three masts.
The ship was built in 1925 by Chantiers Navals Français, Blainville and its engine by Ateliers et Chantiers de la Loire, Nantes. It was launched under the French flas as the SS Vendemiare. In around 1926 it became property of the Polish Polish Ocean Lines and was renamed into SS Katowice.
The ship travelled on the Baltic Sea and North Sea to ports in Sweden and to Preston in the United Kingdom. She has traveled also over the Mediterranean Sea. On 23 August 1939, she was on a voyage from Gdańsk to Italy with captain Bohdan Gawęcki.
The ship left Genoa, Italy during the night of 25 September on voyage to Marseille, France. On 18 November she was traveling to Sète. From that moment on, the ship began to serve in the “Mission des Transports Maritimes”. Captain Ostapowice was captain of the ship during World War II.
In 1940, the ship came under British command but still with the Polish flag. She went among others to Canada. At the end of World War II she served off the coast of England. She was one of the ships that took part at the Normandy landings.
In March 1949 the ship with captain K. Ostapowicz was on voyage to Poland. In Vlissingen, the Netherlands a valuable cargo of rawhide and tanning material had been taken onboard from the Polish SS Kulaski that had had a collision at Westerschelde with the Dutch SS Lissekerk and was severely damaged. North of the Dutch islands the ship encountered a storm. The ship ran aground on the northern grounds of Terschelling and shortly afterwards the ship broke in two behind the engine room. At 10am the captain gave an emergency signal and the Dutch lifeboat Brandaris II 2 sailed to the ship and came alongside about an hour later. The anchor of the lifeboat got stuck behind the railing of Katowice but (fortunately) the anchor chain broke. The lifeboat came multipe times alongside the boat and the Polish crew jumped into the safety net of the lifeboat. Sailor Douwe Tot received the gold rescue medal, that has only be awarded a few times. Klaas Tot (his son), Jaap de Beer and Eelke R. de Beer received the silver medal. Later they also received a high Polish award.
23 of the rescued crew members went with an extra KLM airplane back to Poland.
The cargo had a value of over 2 million Guilders. Many of the 27,000 skins have been salvaged by "Doeksen" shipping company.
Sloop no.2 of the ship washed ashore at Den Helder. It was discovered that the water tanks and air lockers were full of cigarettes and nylon stockings. It also turned out that there had been 80,000 smuggled cigarettes on board.
In April 1949 a public sale took place at the former Beurs-World Trade Center in Rotterdam. Most of the skins were bought by foreigners.
From 1980s many divers went to the ship. It still contained many skins. In 2010 the condenser and spare propeller was salvaged. That propellor is now part of the beachcombers museum on Texel. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "SS Katowice, originally named SS Vendemiare, was a 1925 built 82 metres long Polish merchant steamship. It was owned by Polish Ocean Lines and had hometown Gdynia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The ship served during World War II, including at Normandy landings.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On 1 March 1949 the ship wrecked on Terschelling, the Netherlands. The crew members were rescued.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The ship had an iron hull, and measured 82.4m x 12.2m and had a height of 5.5m. She was assessed at 1995 BRT. The ship had one 2-cylinder compound steam engine a single shaft, one screw and three masts.",
"title": "Ship details"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The ship was built in 1925 by Chantiers Navals Français, Blainville and its engine by Ateliers et Chantiers de la Loire, Nantes. It was launched under the French flas as the SS Vendemiare. In around 1926 it became property of the Polish Polish Ocean Lines and was renamed into SS Katowice.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The ship travelled on the Baltic Sea and North Sea to ports in Sweden and to Preston in the United Kingdom. She has traveled also over the Mediterranean Sea. On 23 August 1939, she was on a voyage from Gdańsk to Italy with captain Bohdan Gawęcki.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The ship left Genoa, Italy during the night of 25 September on voyage to Marseille, France. On 18 November she was traveling to Sète. From that moment on, the ship began to serve in the “Mission des Transports Maritimes”. Captain Ostapowice was captain of the ship during World War II.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In 1940, the ship came under British command but still with the Polish flag. She went among others to Canada. At the end of World War II she served off the coast of England. She was one of the ships that took part at the Normandy landings.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In March 1949 the ship with captain K. Ostapowicz was on voyage to Poland. In Vlissingen, the Netherlands a valuable cargo of rawhide and tanning material had been taken onboard from the Polish SS Kulaski that had had a collision at Westerschelde with the Dutch SS Lissekerk and was severely damaged. North of the Dutch islands the ship encountered a storm. The ship ran aground on the northern grounds of Terschelling and shortly afterwards the ship broke in two behind the engine room. At 10am the captain gave an emergency signal and the Dutch lifeboat Brandaris II 2 sailed to the ship and came alongside about an hour later. The anchor of the lifeboat got stuck behind the railing of Katowice but (fortunately) the anchor chain broke. The lifeboat came multipe times alongside the boat and the Polish crew jumped into the safety net of the lifeboat. Sailor Douwe Tot received the gold rescue medal, that has only be awarded a few times. Klaas Tot (his son), Jaap de Beer and Eelke R. de Beer received the silver medal. Later they also received a high Polish award.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "23 of the rescued crew members went with an extra KLM airplane back to Poland.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "The cargo had a value of over 2 million Guilders. Many of the 27,000 skins have been salvaged by \"Doeksen\" shipping company.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Sloop no.2 of the ship washed ashore at Den Helder. It was discovered that the water tanks and air lockers were full of cigarettes and nylon stockings. It also turned out that there had been 80,000 smuggled cigarettes on board.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "In April 1949 a public sale took place at the former Beurs-World Trade Center in Rotterdam. Most of the skins were bought by foreigners.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "From 1980s many divers went to the ship. It still contained many skins. In 2010 the condenser and spare propeller was salvaged. That propellor is now part of the beachcombers museum on Texel.",
"title": "Wreck dives"
}
] | SS Katowice, originally named SS Vendemiare, was a 1925 built 82 metres long Polish merchant steamship. It was owned by Polish Ocean Lines and had hometown Gdynia. The ship served during World War II, including at Normandy landings. On 1 March 1949 the ship wrecked on Terschelling, the Netherlands. The crew members were rescued. | 2023-12-08T12:49:09Z | 2023-12-13T12:34:15Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox ship career",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:1949 shipwrecks",
"Template:Draft categories",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox ship begin",
"Template:Infobox ship image",
"Template:Infobox ship characteristics",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Katowice |
75,515,679 | Accident (1955 film) | Accident or Hit and Run (Hungarian: Gázolás) is a 1955 Hungarian drama film directed by Viktor Gertler and starring Iván Darvas, Violetta Ferrari and Imre Apáthi. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director József Pán. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Accident or Hit and Run (Hungarian: Gázolás) is a 1955 Hungarian drama film directed by Viktor Gertler and starring Iván Darvas, Violetta Ferrari and Imre Apáthi. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director József Pán.",
"title": ""
}
] | Accident or Hit and Run is a 1955 Hungarian drama film directed by Viktor Gertler and starring Iván Darvas, Violetta Ferrari and Imre Apáthi. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director József Pán. | 2023-12-08T12:50:06Z | 2023-12-20T04:33:03Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Viktor Gertler",
"Template:Hungary-film-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accident_(1955_film) |
75,515,698 | Bassolma Bazie | Bassolma Bazie is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Civil Service, Labor, and Social Protection in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bassolma Bazie is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Civil Service, Labor, and Social Protection in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] | Bassolma Bazie is a Burkinabe politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Civil Service, Labor, and Social Protection in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | 2023-12-08T12:52:43Z | 2023-12-20T15:21:10Z | [
"Template:Burkina Faso-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-end"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bassolma_Bazie |
75,515,701 | Ramón de Manjarrés | Ramón de Manjarrés y de Bofarull (1827, Barcelona – 1918, Seville) was a Spanish industrial engineer, professor, and academic.
Born in 1827 in Barcelona, he studied industrial engineering specializing in chemistry in Madrid, Seville, and Barcelona. He obtained his degree from the Special School of Barcelona in 1869. He worked in stamp manufacturing workshops in Barcelona. In 1855, he was sponsored by the Provincial Deputation of Barcelona as a scientific worker for the 1855 Paris Exposition. In 1862, the Provincial Council of Seville commissioned him to study chemical industries and agricultural arts at the 1862 International Exhibition in London. In 1856, he was appointed professor of General and Applied Chemistry through competitive examination at the Seville Industrial School; in 1860, he was assigned the chair of Inorganic Chemistry and Chemical Analysis at the same school, of which he became director in 1863.
In 1866, due to the closing of the Superior Industrial School of Seville, he assumed the chair of Inorganic Chemistry and Chemical Analysis at the Industrial School of Barcelona, becoming its director in 1868. By royal order in 1891, he was appointed tenured professor at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Seville, in the section of physical-chemical sciences. From March 21, 1892, he was assigned by the Directorate-General of Public Instruction to the meteorological station in Seville. In 1856, he supervised the installation and arrangement of the chemistry laboratory and cabinet at the Seville Industrial School, as well as the establishment of a mineralogical collection, many of which Manjarrés donated.
Between 1868 and 1872, under his direction and initiative, several night classes for artisans were offered at the School of Industrial Engineers in Barcelona, with Manjarrés teaching experimental chemistry. In 1872, he was part of a commission appointed by the Barcelona Provincial Council to propose a comprehensive plan for organizing free education under the province, which was approved on April 24, 1873, including that of the Provincial School of Arts and Crafts. He took charge of its direction and taught Applied Chemistry.
When the School of Industrial Engineers was installed in the building constructed for the literary university in 1871, he arranged the mineralogical museum and inaugurated the raw materials and finished products, directing the installation of the chemistry laboratory. Under his direction, the textiles section of the School of Arts and Crafts was organized. He served as a member and judge at various regional and foreign exhibitions and was part of the committee for the participation of Spanish exhibitors in some of them. At the 1888 Universal Exposition in Barcelona, he was a member of the general council, president of the Installation Commission, special delegate of the Catalan Agricultural Institute of San Isidro, judge of the official section, the food group, and president of the jury to award special prizes granted by the Minister of Development. He was awarded an honorary diploma for his collaborative work.
In 1870, he directed the biweekly newspaper Guía de la Industria in Barcelona and contributed to the magazine Los Vinos y los Aceites (Madrid), the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Agriculture, Livestock, and Rural Industries, and a Dictionary of Chemistry translated and annotated with data relating to Spain, as well as being one of the two directors of this publication. He also contributed to La Agricultura Española (Seville), La Gaceta Industrial (Madrid), the Revista Tecnológica de la Asociación de Ingenieros Industriales (Barcelona), and the Revista del Instituto Agrícola Catalán de San Isidro, among others.
He was a corresponding member of the Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences. In 1867, he was appointed resident partner of the Academy of Natural Sciences and Arts of Barcelona. He was also an honorary member of the College of Pharmacists of Barcelona, awarded a first-class medal, and of the Economic Society of Friends of Barcelona. At the Royal Academy of Natural Sciences and Arts of Barcelona, he served as president and participated in its reorganization. He was vice president of the society Fomento de la Producción Nacional.
As a member of the Catalan Agricultural Institute of San Isidro, he gave lectures on wine and oil production, and wrote about alcohol issues, the sericultural industry, wine adulteration, phylloxera, and vineyard renewal. He was part of all the committees related to exhibitions in which the Agricultural Institute participated, especially at the 1888 Universal Exhibition in Barcelona. He passed away in 1918 in Seville. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ramón de Manjarrés y de Bofarull (1827, Barcelona – 1918, Seville) was a Spanish industrial engineer, professor, and academic.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in 1827 in Barcelona, he studied industrial engineering specializing in chemistry in Madrid, Seville, and Barcelona. He obtained his degree from the Special School of Barcelona in 1869. He worked in stamp manufacturing workshops in Barcelona. In 1855, he was sponsored by the Provincial Deputation of Barcelona as a scientific worker for the 1855 Paris Exposition. In 1862, the Provincial Council of Seville commissioned him to study chemical industries and agricultural arts at the 1862 International Exhibition in London. In 1856, he was appointed professor of General and Applied Chemistry through competitive examination at the Seville Industrial School; in 1860, he was assigned the chair of Inorganic Chemistry and Chemical Analysis at the same school, of which he became director in 1863.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1866, due to the closing of the Superior Industrial School of Seville, he assumed the chair of Inorganic Chemistry and Chemical Analysis at the Industrial School of Barcelona, becoming its director in 1868. By royal order in 1891, he was appointed tenured professor at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Seville, in the section of physical-chemical sciences. From March 21, 1892, he was assigned by the Directorate-General of Public Instruction to the meteorological station in Seville. In 1856, he supervised the installation and arrangement of the chemistry laboratory and cabinet at the Seville Industrial School, as well as the establishment of a mineralogical collection, many of which Manjarrés donated.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Between 1868 and 1872, under his direction and initiative, several night classes for artisans were offered at the School of Industrial Engineers in Barcelona, with Manjarrés teaching experimental chemistry. In 1872, he was part of a commission appointed by the Barcelona Provincial Council to propose a comprehensive plan for organizing free education under the province, which was approved on April 24, 1873, including that of the Provincial School of Arts and Crafts. He took charge of its direction and taught Applied Chemistry.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "When the School of Industrial Engineers was installed in the building constructed for the literary university in 1871, he arranged the mineralogical museum and inaugurated the raw materials and finished products, directing the installation of the chemistry laboratory. Under his direction, the textiles section of the School of Arts and Crafts was organized. He served as a member and judge at various regional and foreign exhibitions and was part of the committee for the participation of Spanish exhibitors in some of them. At the 1888 Universal Exposition in Barcelona, he was a member of the general council, president of the Installation Commission, special delegate of the Catalan Agricultural Institute of San Isidro, judge of the official section, the food group, and president of the jury to award special prizes granted by the Minister of Development. He was awarded an honorary diploma for his collaborative work.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 1870, he directed the biweekly newspaper Guía de la Industria in Barcelona and contributed to the magazine Los Vinos y los Aceites (Madrid), the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Agriculture, Livestock, and Rural Industries, and a Dictionary of Chemistry translated and annotated with data relating to Spain, as well as being one of the two directors of this publication. He also contributed to La Agricultura Española (Seville), La Gaceta Industrial (Madrid), the Revista Tecnológica de la Asociación de Ingenieros Industriales (Barcelona), and the Revista del Instituto Agrícola Catalán de San Isidro, among others.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "He was a corresponding member of the Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences. In 1867, he was appointed resident partner of the Academy of Natural Sciences and Arts of Barcelona. He was also an honorary member of the College of Pharmacists of Barcelona, awarded a first-class medal, and of the Economic Society of Friends of Barcelona. At the Royal Academy of Natural Sciences and Arts of Barcelona, he served as president and participated in its reorganization. He was vice president of the society Fomento de la Producción Nacional.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "As a member of the Catalan Agricultural Institute of San Isidro, he gave lectures on wine and oil production, and wrote about alcohol issues, the sericultural industry, wine adulteration, phylloxera, and vineyard renewal. He was part of all the committees related to exhibitions in which the Agricultural Institute participated, especially at the 1888 Universal Exhibition in Barcelona. He passed away in 1918 in Seville.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] | Ramón de Manjarrés y de Bofarull was a Spanish industrial engineer, professor, and academic. | 2023-12-08T12:53:10Z | 2023-12-26T17:18:30Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Sfn"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram%C3%B3n_de_Manjarr%C3%A9s |
75,515,707 | 2021 South Gippsland Shire Council election | The 2021 South Gippsland Shire Council election was held in October 2021 to elect nine councillors for South Gippsland Shire, a local government area in Victoria, Australia.
This was the first election for the council since it was dismissed by the sacked by the Victorian Government in June 2019, which resulted in its scheduled 2020 election being delayed by a year. The only elected candidate who had previously served on the council was Mohya Davies, who was elected in 2012 but defeated in 2016.
The Victorian Greens endorsed two candidates, while Liberal Party member Nathan Herseyn also contested the election. The local Labor Party branch expressed interest, but did not end up endorsing any candidates.
Following the 2016 election and up until the council was dismissed, five different councillors resigned.
Maxine Kiel (Tarwin Valley Ward) tendered her resignation on 26 September 2018, with Rosemary Cousin − who had joined the Greens that month after contesting as an independent in 2016 − elected as her replacement following a countback.
Liberal Party member Meg Edwards (Tarwin Valley Ward) resigned on 30 October, being replaced by independent James Fawcett the following month.
On 28 February 2019, both Fawcett and fellow councillor Lorraine Brunt (Strzelecki Ward) resigned. Brunt was replaced by Frank Hirst, however no candidate was initially declared elected as Fawcett's replacement at a 1 April countback, with Steve Finlay was elected a week later in a second countback.
Councillor Jeremy Rich (Coastal-Promontory Ward) resigned on 22 April after being charged with "cultivating and trafficking a commercial quantity of cannabis". He was replaced by United Australia Party member Matthew Sherry.
On 18 June 2019, the council was officially dismissed and three administrators appointed in place of elected councillors. A report into the council found there was "aggressive" councillor behaviour and suggested a "neccessary" two-year break. As a result, South Gippsland was one of three LGAs without an election in October 2020.
In September 2021, campaigning for the election began. Some, including dismissed councillor James Fawcett and Gippsland South MP Danny O'Brien, called for former councillors not to contest.
Former mayor and councillor Don Hill, who decided to contest the election, was accused of using his newspaper, South Gippsland Voices, to promote his campaign.
The election was conducted entirely by post and voting began on 5 October. After a large proportion of ballot papers did not arrive by the 22 October deadline, the Victorian Electoral Commission extended the voting deadline by one week. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2021 South Gippsland Shire Council election was held in October 2021 to elect nine councillors for South Gippsland Shire, a local government area in Victoria, Australia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This was the first election for the council since it was dismissed by the sacked by the Victorian Government in June 2019, which resulted in its scheduled 2020 election being delayed by a year. The only elected candidate who had previously served on the council was Mohya Davies, who was elected in 2012 but defeated in 2016.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Victorian Greens endorsed two candidates, while Liberal Party member Nathan Herseyn also contested the election. The local Labor Party branch expressed interest, but did not end up endorsing any candidates.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Following the 2016 election and up until the council was dismissed, five different councillors resigned.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Maxine Kiel (Tarwin Valley Ward) tendered her resignation on 26 September 2018, with Rosemary Cousin − who had joined the Greens that month after contesting as an independent in 2016 − elected as her replacement following a countback.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Liberal Party member Meg Edwards (Tarwin Valley Ward) resigned on 30 October, being replaced by independent James Fawcett the following month.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "On 28 February 2019, both Fawcett and fellow councillor Lorraine Brunt (Strzelecki Ward) resigned. Brunt was replaced by Frank Hirst, however no candidate was initially declared elected as Fawcett's replacement at a 1 April countback, with Steve Finlay was elected a week later in a second countback.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Councillor Jeremy Rich (Coastal-Promontory Ward) resigned on 22 April after being charged with \"cultivating and trafficking a commercial quantity of cannabis\". He was replaced by United Australia Party member Matthew Sherry.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "On 18 June 2019, the council was officially dismissed and three administrators appointed in place of elected councillors. A report into the council found there was \"aggressive\" councillor behaviour and suggested a \"neccessary\" two-year break. As a result, South Gippsland was one of three LGAs without an election in October 2020.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In September 2021, campaigning for the election began. Some, including dismissed councillor James Fawcett and Gippsland South MP Danny O'Brien, called for former councillors not to contest.",
"title": "Campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Former mayor and councillor Don Hill, who decided to contest the election, was accused of using his newspaper, South Gippsland Voices, to promote his campaign.",
"title": "Campaign"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "The election was conducted entirely by post and voting began on 5 October. After a large proportion of ballot papers did not arrive by the 22 October deadline, the Victorian Electoral Commission extended the voting deadline by one week.",
"title": "Campaign"
}
] | The 2021 South Gippsland Shire Council election was held in October 2021 to elect nine councillors for South Gippsland Shire, a local government area in Victoria, Australia. This was the first election for the council since it was dismissed by the sacked by the Victorian Government in June 2019, which resulted in its scheduled 2020 election being delayed by a year. The only elected candidate who had previously served on the council was Mohya Davies, who was elected in 2012 but defeated in 2016. The Victorian Greens endorsed two candidates, while Liberal Party member Nathan Herseyn also contested the election. The local Labor Party branch expressed interest, but did not end up endorsing any candidates. | 2023-12-08T12:55:11Z | 2023-12-30T07:31:04Z | [
"Template:Infobox election",
"Template:See also",
"Template:Steady",
"Template:Election box formal",
"Template:Election box win AU party",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Election box begin",
"Template:Election box candidate AU party",
"Template:Election box informal",
"Template:Election box turnout",
"Template:Election box end",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_South_Gippsland_Shire_Council_election |
75,515,708 | Aboubacar Nacanabo | Aboubacar Nacanabo is a Burkinabe politician, educator and businessman. He is the current Minister of Economy, Finance and Foresight in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022.
Nacanabo was born on 13 October 1979 in Abidjan. He attended his primary and secondary school in Abidjan where he obtained his bachelor's degree before returning to Burkina Faso to continue his studies in Economics at the Josep-Ki Zerbo University. In 2022, he was an international tax expert and manager of the rapid response service- African tax administration forum. He also served as a Commissioner of the Government of Burkina Faso to the National Order of Chartered Accountants under the Ministry of Economy, Finance and Development. He holds a PhD in Taxation of the Digitalised Economy from Académiee sciences de management Paris located in France.
On 11 August 2021, Nacanabo was elected as a chairperson of the organisation The Cross Border Taxation (CBT), whereas Mercy Mbithi from Kenya was appointed as the deputy. The election was held virtually and took place on the 25th meeting of the organisation's technical meeting on 5 August 2021. The organisation was found in 2014 and it is available in 10 countries. Nacanabo as the head of the Tax Audit Unit in the Large Tax Office of the Direction Générale des Imports du Burkina Faso, joined the CBT back in 2014. The aim of the organisation is to provide its members technical analysis of standard-setting processes and to settle inputs from members on the direction the Secretariat should follow .He is claimed to be fluent in English and French. Nacanabo's other work in the CBT is to provide technical design input to the Pillar One and Pillar Two Proposals, including the United Nations Article 12B as well as supporting technical assistance in ATAF country members.
In 2022, Nacanabo was appointed to the position by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré following the coup d'état by Ibrahim Traoré on 30 September. He took office on 27 October. In Rome on 14 February 2023, Nacanabo met with Director-General of the United Nations agency, QU Dongyu, and Dénis Ouédraogo, Minister for Agriculture, Animal and Fisheries Resources to honor Burkina Faso’s appreciation for FAO’s support to the country. The ministers shared with the Director-General about the country’s plans to support an increase of production under the National Development Policy. They also came up with ideas to foster the need to boost and enhance investment in agrifood systems transformation and rural development. The Director-General showed his willingness to support Burkina Faso in agrifood systems transformation and underlined South-South and Triangular Cooperation (SSTC) as a key avenue where agrifood industries and value chains can be developed and supported. The Director-General also pointed out three key components where Burkina Faso’s agrifood systems should also focus including processing of food and improving of agricultural infrastructures.
They also agreed on the need for commitment on the development of smallholder farmers and farmer field schools as well as elaborating on the importance of promoting products to promote jobs for youth and women. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Aboubacar Nacanabo is a Burkinabe politician, educator and businessman. He is the current Minister of Economy, Finance and Foresight in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Nacanabo was born on 13 October 1979 in Abidjan. He attended his primary and secondary school in Abidjan where he obtained his bachelor's degree before returning to Burkina Faso to continue his studies in Economics at the Josep-Ki Zerbo University. In 2022, he was an international tax expert and manager of the rapid response service- African tax administration forum. He also served as a Commissioner of the Government of Burkina Faso to the National Order of Chartered Accountants under the Ministry of Economy, Finance and Development. He holds a PhD in Taxation of the Digitalised Economy from Académiee sciences de management Paris located in France.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On 11 August 2021, Nacanabo was elected as a chairperson of the organisation The Cross Border Taxation (CBT), whereas Mercy Mbithi from Kenya was appointed as the deputy. The election was held virtually and took place on the 25th meeting of the organisation's technical meeting on 5 August 2021. The organisation was found in 2014 and it is available in 10 countries. Nacanabo as the head of the Tax Audit Unit in the Large Tax Office of the Direction Générale des Imports du Burkina Faso, joined the CBT back in 2014. The aim of the organisation is to provide its members technical analysis of standard-setting processes and to settle inputs from members on the direction the Secretariat should follow .He is claimed to be fluent in English and French. Nacanabo's other work in the CBT is to provide technical design input to the Pillar One and Pillar Two Proposals, including the United Nations Article 12B as well as supporting technical assistance in ATAF country members.",
"title": "Leadership"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2022, Nacanabo was appointed to the position by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré following the coup d'état by Ibrahim Traoré on 30 September. He took office on 27 October. In Rome on 14 February 2023, Nacanabo met with Director-General of the United Nations agency, QU Dongyu, and Dénis Ouédraogo, Minister for Agriculture, Animal and Fisheries Resources to honor Burkina Faso’s appreciation for FAO’s support to the country. The ministers shared with the Director-General about the country’s plans to support an increase of production under the National Development Policy. They also came up with ideas to foster the need to boost and enhance investment in agrifood systems transformation and rural development. The Director-General showed his willingness to support Burkina Faso in agrifood systems transformation and underlined South-South and Triangular Cooperation (SSTC) as a key avenue where agrifood industries and value chains can be developed and supported. The Director-General also pointed out three key components where Burkina Faso’s agrifood systems should also focus including processing of food and improving of agricultural infrastructures.",
"title": "Leadership"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "They also agreed on the need for commitment on the development of smallholder farmers and farmer field schools as well as elaborating on the importance of promoting products to promote jobs for youth and women.",
"title": "Leadership"
}
] | Aboubacar Nacanabo is a Burkinabe politician, educator and businessman. He is the current Minister of Economy, Finance and Foresight in Burkina Faso, having been appointed to the position in 2022 by the current interim president of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré. His term began on 21 October 2022. | 2023-12-08T12:55:15Z | 2023-12-31T14:31:01Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aboubacar_Nacanabo |
75,515,722 | Crunchyroll Anime Award for Anime of the Year | The Crunchyroll Anime Award for Anime of the Year is the highest award given at the Crunchyroll Anime Awards since its inaugural edition in 2017. It is given for the best anime series from the previous year. Winners are determined through a combined voting process by judges and public voting.
Yaoi sports anime Yuri on Ice by MAPPA first won the award in 2017. In its latest edition, the award was won by Cyberpunk: Edgerunners by Studio Trigger. MAPPA received seven nominations and three wins for the award, the most of any studio to date. Wit Studio and Bones each received six and five nominations for the award respectively.
Currently, no anime series has won the award more than once. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Crunchyroll Anime Award for Anime of the Year is the highest award given at the Crunchyroll Anime Awards since its inaugural edition in 2017. It is given for the best anime series from the previous year. Winners are determined through a combined voting process by judges and public voting.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Yaoi sports anime Yuri on Ice by MAPPA first won the award in 2017. In its latest edition, the award was won by Cyberpunk: Edgerunners by Studio Trigger. MAPPA received seven nominations and three wins for the award, the most of any studio to date. Wit Studio and Bones each received six and five nominations for the award respectively.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "Winners"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Currently, no anime series has won the award more than once.",
"title": "Records"
}
] | The Crunchyroll Anime Award for Anime of the Year is the highest award given at the Crunchyroll Anime Awards since its inaugural edition in 2017. It is given for the best anime series from the previous year. Winners are determined through a combined voting process by judges and public voting. Yaoi sports anime Yuri on Ice by MAPPA first won the award in 2017. In its latest edition, the award was won by Cyberpunk: Edgerunners by Studio Trigger. MAPPA received seven nominations and three wins for the award, the most of any studio to date. Wit Studio and Bones each received six and five nominations for the award respectively. | 2023-12-08T12:59:41Z | 2023-12-17T06:55:21Z | [
"Template:Infobox award",
"Template:Multiple image",
"Template:TBA",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crunchyroll_Anime_Award_for_Anime_of_the_Year |
75,515,768 | List of Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Spain | The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.
Spain signed the convention on 3 November 2003, ratified it on 6 October 2006, and it came into force in the country on 25 January 2007. Spain registered its first two elements on the representative list in 2008, and, as of 2023, it had registered twenty-one elements, of which eight are shared with other countries. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The \"intangible cultural heritage\" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Spain signed the convention on 3 November 2003, ratified it on 6 October 2006, and it came into force in the country on 25 January 2007. Spain registered its first two elements on the representative list in 2008, and, as of 2023, it had registered twenty-one elements, of which eight are shared with other countries.",
"title": ""
}
] | The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention. Spain signed the convention on 3 November 2003, ratified it on 6 October 2006, and it came into force in the country on 25 January 2007. Spain registered its first two elements on the representative list in 2008, and, as of 2023, it had registered twenty-one elements, of which eight are shared with other countries. | 2023-12-08T13:10:58Z | 2023-12-13T10:15:49Z | [
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Legend",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Intangible Heritage Spain",
"Template:World topic",
"Template:Efn",
"Template:Notelist",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intangible_Cultural_Heritage_elements_in_Spain |
75,515,786 | Raquel Sancinetti | Raquel Sancinetti is a Brazilian-Canadian animator. She is most noted for her 2023 film Madeleine, which won the Prix Iris for Best Animated Short Film at the 25th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2023.
She worked in visual effects on Brazilian films before moving to Canada to study animation at Concordia University's Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema.
Madeleine was also named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Raquel Sancinetti is a Brazilian-Canadian animator. She is most noted for her 2023 film Madeleine, which won the Prix Iris for Best Animated Short Film at the 25th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She worked in visual effects on Brazilian films before moving to Canada to study animation at Concordia University's Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Madeleine was also named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023.",
"title": ""
}
] | Raquel Sancinetti is a Brazilian-Canadian animator. She is most noted for her 2023 film Madeleine, which won the Prix Iris for Best Animated Short Film at the 25th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2023. She worked in visual effects on Brazilian films before moving to Canada to study animation at Concordia University's Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. Madeleine was also named to the Toronto International Film Festival's annual Canada's Top Ten list for 2023. | 2023-12-08T13:14:10Z | 2023-12-15T23:07:20Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Imdb name",
"Template:Canada-animator-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raquel_Sancinetti |
75,515,815 | Maktar Shapee | Dato' Haji Maktar bin Haji Shapee is a former Deputy Speaker of the Penang State Legislative Assembly and a former Member of the Penang State Legislative Assembly for Sungai Bakap from 2008 to 2018. He is a member of People's Justice Party (PKR), a component party of Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Pakatan Rakyat (PR) coalitions.
His name was dropped at the 2018 general election.
Maktar Shapee was born on 3 July 1949 in Sungai Bakap, Penang.
After completing his studies at Pondok Pokok Sena Kepala Batas School, he continued his studies at Darul Uloom Deoband, India and then to Al-Azhar University, Egypt in the field of Islamic Studies. Returned to his homeland in 1972 and served his countrymen in the teaching field at SM Tuanku Muhammad, Kuala Pilah Negeri Sembilan. In 1978 he moved to SM Perempuan St.George, Penang. After a year of service, he moved to SM Tun Syed Sheh Barakbah, Sungai Bakap. In 1994 he was promoted and served in the Penang Department of Education as a Supervisor of Islamic Education. In early 1998 he was promoted to Assistant District Education Officer, Seberang Perai Selatan.
He is a member of ABIM (Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement) since 1978; was once appointed as ABIM Chairman of Seberang Perai Selatan District & Deputy YDP of Penang ABIM. Later, he was elected as a member of the Malaysian Scholars' Association, Penang (PUMPP) and entrusted with the position of PUMPP Secretary.
Maktar Shapee made his first electoral debut at Sungai Bakap seat, howevwe he lost to Gerakan candidate Lai Chew Hock in 1999 general election. In 2004 general election, he once again lost to UMNO candidate Abdul Rashid Abdullah in the same seat. In 2008 general election, he elected as MLA of Sungai Bakap, defeating Abdul Rashid Abdullah, who is the Deputy Chief Minister of Penang. In 2012, he was appointed as the Deputy Chairman of the Penang Islamic Religious Council. He retained his seat in 2013 and appointed as the Deputy Speaker of the Penang State Legislative Assembly. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dato' Haji Maktar bin Haji Shapee is a former Deputy Speaker of the Penang State Legislative Assembly and a former Member of the Penang State Legislative Assembly for Sungai Bakap from 2008 to 2018. He is a member of People's Justice Party (PKR), a component party of Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Pakatan Rakyat (PR) coalitions.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "His name was dropped at the 2018 general election.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Maktar Shapee was born on 3 July 1949 in Sungai Bakap, Penang.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "After completing his studies at Pondok Pokok Sena Kepala Batas School, he continued his studies at Darul Uloom Deoband, India and then to Al-Azhar University, Egypt in the field of Islamic Studies. Returned to his homeland in 1972 and served his countrymen in the teaching field at SM Tuanku Muhammad, Kuala Pilah Negeri Sembilan. In 1978 he moved to SM Perempuan St.George, Penang. After a year of service, he moved to SM Tun Syed Sheh Barakbah, Sungai Bakap. In 1994 he was promoted and served in the Penang Department of Education as a Supervisor of Islamic Education. In early 1998 he was promoted to Assistant District Education Officer, Seberang Perai Selatan.",
"title": "Education and early career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "He is a member of ABIM (Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement) since 1978; was once appointed as ABIM Chairman of Seberang Perai Selatan District & Deputy YDP of Penang ABIM. Later, he was elected as a member of the Malaysian Scholars' Association, Penang (PUMPP) and entrusted with the position of PUMPP Secretary.",
"title": "Political career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Maktar Shapee made his first electoral debut at Sungai Bakap seat, howevwe he lost to Gerakan candidate Lai Chew Hock in 1999 general election. In 2004 general election, he once again lost to UMNO candidate Abdul Rashid Abdullah in the same seat. In 2008 general election, he elected as MLA of Sungai Bakap, defeating Abdul Rashid Abdullah, who is the Deputy Chief Minister of Penang. In 2012, he was appointed as the Deputy Chairman of the Penang Islamic Religious Council. He retained his seat in 2013 and appointed as the Deputy Speaker of the Penang State Legislative Assembly.",
"title": "Political career"
}
] | Dato' Haji Maktar bin Haji Shapee is a former Deputy Speaker of the Penang State Legislative Assembly and a former Member of the Penang State Legislative Assembly for Sungai Bakap from 2008 to 2018. He is a member of People's Justice Party (PKR), a component party of Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Pakatan Rakyat (PR) coalitions. His name was dropped at the 2018 general election. | 2023-12-08T13:20:21Z | 2023-12-31T13:17:37Z | [
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Flag",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal bar",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Malay name"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maktar_Shapee |
75,515,843 | Britt Bendixen | Britt Bendixen (14 January 1942 — 18 February 2023) was a Danish choreographer and dance instructor who is remembered in Denmark for her many appearances as a judge in the television series Vild med dans. As a choreographer, she contributed to many revues, including Copenhagen's popular Cirkusrevyen year after year. Bendixen taught until 2015 at the Pejsegaarden dance school in Husum which she inherited from her mother. In 2017, she published her autobiography Et lyst sind.
Born on 14 January 1942 in Copenhagen, Britt Bendixen was the daughter of the dance instructor Frode Godtfred Hekkel Bendixen (1907–1996) and his wife Mitzi Naemi née Podsedek, a dance instructor and restaurateur. She was brought up by her mother and her Swedish grandmother Edla Ekstrand (1881–1965) in the Pejsegården dance school which was run by her mother, first in Brønshøj then in Husum. Her parents separated when she was six. When she was 12 she was sent to a boarding school as her mother needed time to run the school. Bendixen was particularly competent in foreign languages and thought for a time she might work as a translator. She then spent a year in Switzerland as an au pair. By the time she was 19, she had been trained as a dance instructor.
From the age of 19, Bendixen worked as a dance instructor, training many famous and not so famous people. One of her most successful pupils was Mads Blangstrup of the Royal Danish Ballet. She increasingly devoted herself to choreography, contributing to many revues including Circusrevyen on numerous occasions. In 2015, she sold the Pejsegaarden dance school.
She is remembered above all for the many years she served as a judge in the television series Vild med dans, from its beginning in 2005 until she retired in 2021. In 2017, she published her biography Et lyst sind - er ofte en viljessag (A bright mind - is often a matter of will).
From 1965, Bendixen lived with the American choreographer Gene Nettles (1928–1994). Together they had a son Niclas Bendixen (born 1972) who also became a dance instructor. The couple separated in 1981. From 1997, Bendixen's partner was the IT expert Marianne Nybo (born 1960). The two married shortly before Bendixen's death.
Britt Bendixen died on 18 February 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Britt Bendixen (14 January 1942 — 18 February 2023) was a Danish choreographer and dance instructor who is remembered in Denmark for her many appearances as a judge in the television series Vild med dans. As a choreographer, she contributed to many revues, including Copenhagen's popular Cirkusrevyen year after year. Bendixen taught until 2015 at the Pejsegaarden dance school in Husum which she inherited from her mother. In 2017, she published her autobiography Et lyst sind.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born on 14 January 1942 in Copenhagen, Britt Bendixen was the daughter of the dance instructor Frode Godtfred Hekkel Bendixen (1907–1996) and his wife Mitzi Naemi née Podsedek, a dance instructor and restaurateur. She was brought up by her mother and her Swedish grandmother Edla Ekstrand (1881–1965) in the Pejsegården dance school which was run by her mother, first in Brønshøj then in Husum. Her parents separated when she was six. When she was 12 she was sent to a boarding school as her mother needed time to run the school. Bendixen was particularly competent in foreign languages and thought for a time she might work as a translator. She then spent a year in Switzerland as an au pair. By the time she was 19, she had been trained as a dance instructor.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "From the age of 19, Bendixen worked as a dance instructor, training many famous and not so famous people. One of her most successful pupils was Mads Blangstrup of the Royal Danish Ballet. She increasingly devoted herself to choreography, contributing to many revues including Circusrevyen on numerous occasions. In 2015, she sold the Pejsegaarden dance school.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She is remembered above all for the many years she served as a judge in the television series Vild med dans, from its beginning in 2005 until she retired in 2021. In 2017, she published her biography Et lyst sind - er ofte en viljessag (A bright mind - is often a matter of will).",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "From 1965, Bendixen lived with the American choreographer Gene Nettles (1928–1994). Together they had a son Niclas Bendixen (born 1972) who also became a dance instructor. The couple separated in 1981. From 1997, Bendixen's partner was the IT expert Marianne Nybo (born 1960). The two married shortly before Bendixen's death.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Britt Bendixen died on 18 February 2023.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Britt Bendixen was a Danish choreographer and dance instructor who is remembered in Denmark for her many appearances as a judge in the television series Vild med dans. As a choreographer, she contributed to many revues, including Copenhagen's popular Cirkusrevyen year after year. Bendixen taught until 2015 at the Pejsegaarden dance school in Husum which she inherited from her mother. In 2017, she published her autobiography Et lyst sind. | 2023-12-08T13:24:59Z | 2023-12-26T12:38:27Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britt_Bendixen |
75,515,862 | 2017 Taini Jamison Trophy Series | The 2017 Taini Jamison Trophy Series was the ninth Taini Jamison Trophy series. It featured New Zealand playing England in three netball test matches, played in September 2017. New Zealand won the opening test 62–55. England won the second test 46–49 to level the series 1–1. However, New Zealand subsequently won the third test 62–55 and the series 2–1. The New Zealand team were coached by Janine Southby and captained by Katrina Grant. England were coached by Tracey Neville and captained by Ama Agbeze. The series was broadcast live on Radio Sport and Sky Sport in New Zealand and on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
Sources:
Sources:
Sources:
Sources:
Sources: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2017 Taini Jamison Trophy Series was the ninth Taini Jamison Trophy series. It featured New Zealand playing England in three netball test matches, played in September 2017. New Zealand won the opening test 62–55. England won the second test 46–49 to level the series 1–1. However, New Zealand subsequently won the third test 62–55 and the series 2–1. The New Zealand team were coached by Janine Southby and captained by Katrina Grant. England were coached by Tracey Neville and captained by Ama Agbeze. The series was broadcast live on Radio Sport and Sky Sport in New Zealand and on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Squads"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Squads"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Matches"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Matches"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Matches"
}
] | The 2017 Taini Jamison Trophy Series was the ninth Taini Jamison Trophy series. It featured New Zealand playing England in three netball test matches, played in September 2017. New Zealand won the opening test 62–55. England won the second test 46–49 to level the series 1–1. However, New Zealand subsequently won the third test 62–55 and the series 2–1. The New Zealand team were coached by Janine Southby and captained by Katrina Grant. England were coached by Tracey Neville and captained by Ama Agbeze. The series was broadcast live on Radio Sport and Sky Sport in New Zealand and on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland. | 2023-12-08T13:28:47Z | 2023-12-13T16:30:01Z | [
"Template:INF roster player",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Netballbox",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Taini Jamison Trophy",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox Netball Quad Series",
"Template:INF roster header",
"Template:INF roster footer",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_Taini_Jamison_Trophy_Series |
75,515,879 | Xyriel Manabat filmography | Filipino actress Xyriel Manabat began her career as child actress after finishing third runner-up in the talent search program Star Circle Kid Quest. After playing minor appearances in a number of television programs, she had her breakthrough role in the 2010 fantasy drama series Agua Bendita. She gained wider recognition for portraying the title character in the fantasy drama series Momay and a supporting role in the series Noah. In late 2010, Manabat made her screen debut at age 6 as Monay Montecillo in the dramedy Ang Tanging Ina Mo (Last na 'To!). Her portrayal received praises from the critics, earning her accolades for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS Awards, Movie Child Performer of the Year at the PMPC Star Awards for Movies and Best Child Performer at the Metro Manila Film Festival.
Further success followed with her performance in the dramedy film Pak! Pak! My Dr. Kwak! and her first lead role as young Anna Manalastas in the Christian drama series 100 Days to Heaven alongside Coney Reyes. For her portrayal, she earned a number of accolades including Best Child Performer at the PMPC Star Awards for Television, Most Popular Female Child Performer at the Box Office Entertainment Awards and Best Performance by an Actress at the Gawad Tanglaw Awards among others. During this period, Manabat also appeared in television programs such as Ikaw ang Pag-ibig (2011) and a string of episodes in the anthologies Maalaala Mo Kaya and Wansapanataym. In 2011, she starred in two films: the crossover sequel Enteng ng Ina Mo and the family drama A Mother's Story. For the latter, she scored her second FAMAS for Best Child Actress and starred in her first horror project Amorosa the following year, which also earned Manabat her third nomination for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS.
In films, Manabat was cast in a number of blockbuster films such as 24/7 in Love (2012), Sisterakas (2012) and Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy (2013). Manabat also appeared in several television programs such as Kailangan Ko'y Ikaw (2013) and Hawak Kamay (2014), as well as young versions of the lead in The Legal Wife (2014), Ikaw Lamang (2014) and Wildflower (2017). After a six-year hiatus, she made her acting comeback in 2023 through the television series Dirty Linen and Senior High. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Filipino actress Xyriel Manabat began her career as child actress after finishing third runner-up in the talent search program Star Circle Kid Quest. After playing minor appearances in a number of television programs, she had her breakthrough role in the 2010 fantasy drama series Agua Bendita. She gained wider recognition for portraying the title character in the fantasy drama series Momay and a supporting role in the series Noah. In late 2010, Manabat made her screen debut at age 6 as Monay Montecillo in the dramedy Ang Tanging Ina Mo (Last na 'To!). Her portrayal received praises from the critics, earning her accolades for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS Awards, Movie Child Performer of the Year at the PMPC Star Awards for Movies and Best Child Performer at the Metro Manila Film Festival.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Further success followed with her performance in the dramedy film Pak! Pak! My Dr. Kwak! and her first lead role as young Anna Manalastas in the Christian drama series 100 Days to Heaven alongside Coney Reyes. For her portrayal, she earned a number of accolades including Best Child Performer at the PMPC Star Awards for Television, Most Popular Female Child Performer at the Box Office Entertainment Awards and Best Performance by an Actress at the Gawad Tanglaw Awards among others. During this period, Manabat also appeared in television programs such as Ikaw ang Pag-ibig (2011) and a string of episodes in the anthologies Maalaala Mo Kaya and Wansapanataym. In 2011, she starred in two films: the crossover sequel Enteng ng Ina Mo and the family drama A Mother's Story. For the latter, she scored her second FAMAS for Best Child Actress and starred in her first horror project Amorosa the following year, which also earned Manabat her third nomination for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In films, Manabat was cast in a number of blockbuster films such as 24/7 in Love (2012), Sisterakas (2012) and Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy (2013). Manabat also appeared in several television programs such as Kailangan Ko'y Ikaw (2013) and Hawak Kamay (2014), as well as young versions of the lead in The Legal Wife (2014), Ikaw Lamang (2014) and Wildflower (2017). After a six-year hiatus, she made her acting comeback in 2023 through the television series Dirty Linen and Senior High.",
"title": ""
}
] | Filipino actress Xyriel Manabat began her career as child actress after finishing third runner-up in the talent search program Star Circle Kid Quest. After playing minor appearances in a number of television programs, she had her breakthrough role in the 2010 fantasy drama series Agua Bendita. She gained wider recognition for portraying the title character in the fantasy drama series Momay and a supporting role in the series Noah. In late 2010, Manabat made her screen debut at age 6 as Monay Montecillo in the dramedy Ang Tanging Ina Mo. Her portrayal received praises from the critics, earning her accolades for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS Awards, Movie Child Performer of the Year at the PMPC Star Awards for Movies and Best Child Performer at the Metro Manila Film Festival. Further success followed with her performance in the dramedy film Pak! Pak! My Dr. Kwak! and her first lead role as young Anna Manalastas in the Christian drama series 100 Days to Heaven alongside Coney Reyes. For her portrayal, she earned a number of accolades including Best Child Performer at the PMPC Star Awards for Television, Most Popular Female Child Performer at the Box Office Entertainment Awards and Best Performance by an Actress at the Gawad Tanglaw Awards among others. During this period, Manabat also appeared in television programs such as Ikaw ang Pag-ibig (2011) and a string of episodes in the anthologies Maalaala Mo Kaya and Wansapanataym. In 2011, she starred in two films: the crossover sequel Enteng ng Ina Mo and the family drama A Mother's Story. For the latter, she scored her second FAMAS for Best Child Actress and starred in her first horror project Amorosa the following year, which also earned Manabat her third nomination for Best Child Actress at the FAMAS. In films, Manabat was cast in a number of blockbuster films such as 24/7 in Love (2012), Sisterakas (2012) and Girl, Boy, Bakla, Tomboy (2013). Manabat also appeared in several television programs such as Kailangan Ko'y Ikaw (2013) and Hawak Kamay (2014), as well as young versions of the lead in The Legal Wife (2014), Ikaw Lamang (2014) and Wildflower (2017). After a six-year hiatus, she made her acting comeback in 2023 through the television series Dirty Linen and Senior High. | 2023-12-08T13:33:07Z | 2023-12-20T07:23:03Z | [
"Template:Smalldiv",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:IMDb name",
"Template:Tooltip",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use Philippine English",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Center",
"Template:Sronly"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xyriel_Manabat_filmography |
75,515,888 | Urdaneta-Armsat | Urdaneta-Armsat is a series of Spanish-Armenian nanosatellites developed by the Basque company Satlantis Microsats in collaboration with the Armenian national company Geocosmos, in the CubeSat (16U) format.
The first satellite in this series, Armsat-1, was launched into orbit by Armenia in May 2022, thus becoming the first Armenian satellite.
Armenia has been seeking to develop a space program since the 2020s, particularly aiming to achieve strategic autonomy in the satellite field. The country embarked on a dual program, enlisting the services of the Spanish company Satlantis Microsats in collaboration with its national company Geocosmos to develop a series of research satellites called Urdaneta-Armsat. Additionally, Armenia began developing a fully Armenian program to achieve strategic autonomy, including the launch of the Hayasat-1 satellite towards the end of 2023.
The Urdaneta-Armsat series consists of satellites commissioned by Armenia, equipped with the Satlantis iSIM-907 optical device. These satellites are intended for non-military observation purposes, such as agricultural organization and security. They weigh 16.4kg and are designed to operate in a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of approximately 530km. The expected lifespan of these satellites is around 4 years.
The first satellite of the series, named Urdaneta-Armsat-1, was launched into orbit on May 25, 2022, from Cape Canaveral using a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. It was the first Armenian satellite in orbit and was also described as the first Basque satellite, as Satlantis is a Basque company.
The Armenian side expressed satisfaction with the launch and operation of Armsat-1, leading them to sign a longer contract with Satlantis.
At least a second satellite is planned. During the 2023 Azerbaijani offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh, the satellite captured images of areas affected by conflict, although Armenian authorities stated that it was not used for military purposes. As a development, Armenia is constructing a control center within its borders to enhance its monitoring and development capabilities in relation to this satellite and future ones. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Urdaneta-Armsat is a series of Spanish-Armenian nanosatellites developed by the Basque company Satlantis Microsats in collaboration with the Armenian national company Geocosmos, in the CubeSat (16U) format.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The first satellite in this series, Armsat-1, was launched into orbit by Armenia in May 2022, thus becoming the first Armenian satellite.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Armenia has been seeking to develop a space program since the 2020s, particularly aiming to achieve strategic autonomy in the satellite field. The country embarked on a dual program, enlisting the services of the Spanish company Satlantis Microsats in collaboration with its national company Geocosmos to develop a series of research satellites called Urdaneta-Armsat. Additionally, Armenia began developing a fully Armenian program to achieve strategic autonomy, including the launch of the Hayasat-1 satellite towards the end of 2023.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Urdaneta-Armsat series consists of satellites commissioned by Armenia, equipped with the Satlantis iSIM-907 optical device. These satellites are intended for non-military observation purposes, such as agricultural organization and security. They weigh 16.4kg and are designed to operate in a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of approximately 530km. The expected lifespan of these satellites is around 4 years.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The first satellite of the series, named Urdaneta-Armsat-1, was launched into orbit on May 25, 2022, from Cape Canaveral using a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. It was the first Armenian satellite in orbit and was also described as the first Basque satellite, as Satlantis is a Basque company.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The Armenian side expressed satisfaction with the launch and operation of Armsat-1, leading them to sign a longer contract with Satlantis.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "At least a second satellite is planned. During the 2023 Azerbaijani offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh, the satellite captured images of areas affected by conflict, although Armenian authorities stated that it was not used for military purposes. As a development, Armenia is constructing a control center within its borders to enhance its monitoring and development capabilities in relation to this satellite and future ones.",
"title": "History"
}
] | Urdaneta-Armsat is a series of Spanish-Armenian nanosatellites developed by the Basque company Satlantis Microsats in collaboration with the Armenian national company Geocosmos, in the CubeSat (16U) format. The first satellite in this series, Armsat-1, was launched into orbit by Armenia in May 2022, thus becoming the first Armenian satellite. | 2023-12-08T13:35:00Z | 2023-12-28T02:54:20Z | [
"Template:Infobox spaceflight",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Orbital launches in 2022"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urdaneta-Armsat |
75,515,900 | 2024 Tour Down Under | The 2024 Men's Tour Down Under is a road cycling stage race that will take place between 16 and 21 January 2024 in and around Adelaide, South Australia. It will be the 24th edition of the Tour Down Under and the first race of the 2024 UCI World Tour.
All eighteen UCI WorldTeams will participate in the race.
UCI WorldTeams | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2024 Men's Tour Down Under is a road cycling stage race that will take place between 16 and 21 January 2024 in and around Adelaide, South Australia. It will be the 24th edition of the Tour Down Under and the first race of the 2024 UCI World Tour.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "All eighteen UCI WorldTeams will participate in the race.",
"title": "Teams"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "UCI WorldTeams",
"title": "Teams"
}
] | The 2024 Men's Tour Down Under is a road cycling stage race that will take place between 16 and 21 January 2024 in and around Adelaide, South Australia. It will be the 24th edition of the Tour Down Under and the first race of the 2024 UCI World Tour. | 2023-12-08T13:37:38Z | 2023-12-25T08:35:21Z | [
"Template:Convert",
"Template:Cjersey",
"Template:Fontcolour",
"Template:Column",
"Template:Div col end",
"Template:Tour Down Under",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Infobox cycling race report",
"Template:Ct",
"Template:Official website",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Div col",
"Template:Columns-start",
"Template:Columns-end",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:For"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Tour_Down_Under |
75,515,904 | Horace Bull Allis | Horace Bull Allis (1813-1868) served as Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives and represented Jefferson County, Arkansas. He was a Unionist Republican.
He was involved in an 1853 Arkansas Supreme Court case.
He sent a letter to U.S. president Abraham Lincoln.
He was one of the preparers of Arkansas' 1864 constitution. He lived in Pine Bluff. He was accused of being a Copperhead while serving as Speaker of the Arkansas House.
He refused to sign William M. Fishback's election certificate. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Horace Bull Allis (1813-1868) served as Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives and represented Jefferson County, Arkansas. He was a Unionist Republican.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was involved in an 1853 Arkansas Supreme Court case.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "He sent a letter to U.S. president Abraham Lincoln.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He was one of the preparers of Arkansas' 1864 constitution. He lived in Pine Bluff. He was accused of being a Copperhead while serving as Speaker of the Arkansas House.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "He refused to sign William M. Fishback's election certificate.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Horace Bull Allis (1813-1868) served as Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives and represented Jefferson County, Arkansas. He was a Unionist Republican. He was involved in an 1853 Arkansas Supreme Court case. He sent a letter to U.S. president Abraham Lincoln. He was one of the preparers of Arkansas' 1864 constitution. He lived in Pine Bluff. He was accused of being a Copperhead while serving as Speaker of the Arkansas House. He refused to sign William M. Fishback's election certificate. | 2023-12-08T13:39:03Z | 2023-12-21T02:28:49Z | [
"Template:Arkansas-politician-stub",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Improve categories"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Bull_Allis |
75,515,905 | Veronika Wand-Danielsson | Veronika Wand-Danielsson (born 9 March 1959) is a Swedish activist and diplomat who is the incumbent ambassador to Germany since 2023, France from 2014 to 2020, NATO from 2007 to 2014. She became the first female ambassador of Sweden to France and Monaco in 2014.
Wand-Danielsson, a diplomat's daughter, lived some of her early years in Africa. Following her education at Sciences Po Paris, among others.
Wand-Danielsson has a background in foreign policy. Prior to joining the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1990 and taking on responsibility for UN relations, she had worked at the OECD/DAC in Paris. After that, she worked at the aid directorate of the European Commission and as Sweden's permanent representative to the EU in Brussels, where she oversaw projects like the Lisbon Treaty and the EU's long-term budget.
Wand-Danielsson was appointed Sweden's NATO ambassador in 2007. She gave a mildly humorous account of the selection procedure. By 2014, managing a demanding portfolio while collaborating with military colleagues in a setting where men dominated. Sweden created history that same year when it unveiled the first openly "feminist" foreign policy in history, placing women's rights and gender equality at the top of its diplomatic agenda. In her initial reaction, she drew attention to the difficult decision that female diplomats have frequently had to make when asked to represent government initiatives for gender equality in public.
In 2014, Wand-Danielsson took the lead in spearheading the new feminist foreign policy initiatives after being appointed ambassador to France. Along with Geraldine Byrne Nason, Wand-Danielsson broadened her influence by starting a network for female ambassadors in Paris. She was already associated with the Women in International Security program during her time at NATO. The Paris group meets regularly with colleagues and female ambassadors from every continent.
Wand-Danielsson claimed that her purpose for coming was to repair business relations. An era was to begin with the royal family's visit to France at the end of 2014. This momentum was halted significantly by the terrorist attacks in 2015.
Wand-Danielsson was appointed by the Government of Sweden as the new ambassador to Berlin. At that time, she was in charge of the Foreign Ministry's Europe and North America division. August marks her official start to her new role. On 8 November 2023, she was greeted by Stone Sizani.
Wand-Danielsson is married to Christian Danielsson (born 1956), state secretary to Minister for EU Affairs, together they have two children. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Veronika Wand-Danielsson (born 9 March 1959) is a Swedish activist and diplomat who is the incumbent ambassador to Germany since 2023, France from 2014 to 2020, NATO from 2007 to 2014. She became the first female ambassador of Sweden to France and Monaco in 2014.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson, a diplomat's daughter, lived some of her early years in Africa. Following her education at Sciences Po Paris, among others.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson has a background in foreign policy. Prior to joining the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1990 and taking on responsibility for UN relations, she had worked at the OECD/DAC in Paris. After that, she worked at the aid directorate of the European Commission and as Sweden's permanent representative to the EU in Brussels, where she oversaw projects like the Lisbon Treaty and the EU's long-term budget.",
"title": "Diplomatic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson was appointed Sweden's NATO ambassador in 2007. She gave a mildly humorous account of the selection procedure. By 2014, managing a demanding portfolio while collaborating with military colleagues in a setting where men dominated. Sweden created history that same year when it unveiled the first openly \"feminist\" foreign policy in history, placing women's rights and gender equality at the top of its diplomatic agenda. In her initial reaction, she drew attention to the difficult decision that female diplomats have frequently had to make when asked to represent government initiatives for gender equality in public.",
"title": "Diplomatic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2014, Wand-Danielsson took the lead in spearheading the new feminist foreign policy initiatives after being appointed ambassador to France. Along with Geraldine Byrne Nason, Wand-Danielsson broadened her influence by starting a network for female ambassadors in Paris. She was already associated with the Women in International Security program during her time at NATO. The Paris group meets regularly with colleagues and female ambassadors from every continent.",
"title": "Diplomatic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson claimed that her purpose for coming was to repair business relations. An era was to begin with the royal family's visit to France at the end of 2014. This momentum was halted significantly by the terrorist attacks in 2015.",
"title": "Diplomatic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson was appointed by the Government of Sweden as the new ambassador to Berlin. At that time, she was in charge of the Foreign Ministry's Europe and North America division. August marks her official start to her new role. On 8 November 2023, she was greeted by Stone Sizani.",
"title": "Diplomatic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Wand-Danielsson is married to Christian Danielsson (born 1956), state secretary to Minister for EU Affairs, together they have two children.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Veronika Wand-Danielsson is a Swedish activist and diplomat who is the incumbent ambassador to Germany since 2023, France from 2014 to 2020, NATO from 2007 to 2014. She became the first female ambassador of Sweden to France and Monaco in 2014. | 2023-12-08T13:39:18Z | 2023-12-10T16:28:46Z | [
"Template:Flag",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-dip",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veronika_Wand-Danielsson |
75,515,923 | The Truth (Chinese TV series) | The Truth (Chinese: 风过留痕), is an upcoming Chinese television series directed by Zhang Tong starring Gong Jun, Jiang Wu and Sun Yi in the leading roles. It is based on the novel "Shi An Diao Cha Ke"(尸案调查科)by Jiu Di Shui. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Truth (Chinese: 风过留痕), is an upcoming Chinese television series directed by Zhang Tong starring Gong Jun, Jiang Wu and Sun Yi in the leading roles. It is based on the novel \"Shi An Diao Cha Ke\"(尸案调查科)by Jiu Di Shui.",
"title": ""
}
] | The Truth, is an upcoming Chinese television series directed by Zhang Tong starring Gong Jun, Jiang Wu and Sun Yi in the leading roles. It is based on the novel "Shi An Diao Cha Ke"(尸案调查科)by Jiu Di Shui. | 2023-12-08T13:41:24Z | 2023-12-08T13:41:24Z | [
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Infobox television",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Truth_(Chinese_TV_series) |
75,515,944 | DXCO-FM | DXCO (92.7 FM), on-air as Heart FM 92.7, is a radio station owned and operated by Cagayan de Oro Media Corporation. The station's studio and transmitter are located at the 5th Floor, FICCO Admin Building, Vamenta Boulevard, Brgy. Carmen, Cagayan de Oro.
The station was established on July 1, 2017, under the Radyo ni Juan network. It was managed by Rizal Memorial Colleges Broadcasting Corporation, which also managed sister station DXJR. In August 2020, the station, along with most of Radyo ni Juan stations, went off the air due to financial problems.
On March 1, 2021, former Bukidnon 3rd District board member Gordon Torres, manager of Bukidnon-based 92.1 FM, took over the station's operations and relaunched it as Radyo Abante. It went off the air in March 2022. On February 14, 2023, management of Bukidnon-based DXIZ took over the station's operations and relaunched it as Heart FM. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "DXCO (92.7 FM), on-air as Heart FM 92.7, is a radio station owned and operated by Cagayan de Oro Media Corporation. The station's studio and transmitter are located at the 5th Floor, FICCO Admin Building, Vamenta Boulevard, Brgy. Carmen, Cagayan de Oro.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The station was established on July 1, 2017, under the Radyo ni Juan network. It was managed by Rizal Memorial Colleges Broadcasting Corporation, which also managed sister station DXJR. In August 2020, the station, along with most of Radyo ni Juan stations, went off the air due to financial problems.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On March 1, 2021, former Bukidnon 3rd District board member Gordon Torres, manager of Bukidnon-based 92.1 FM, took over the station's operations and relaunched it as Radyo Abante. It went off the air in March 2022. On February 14, 2023, management of Bukidnon-based DXIZ took over the station's operations and relaunched it as Heart FM.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | DXCO, on-air as Heart FM 92.7, is a radio station owned and operated by Cagayan de Oro Media Corporation. The station's studio and transmitter are located at the 5th Floor, FICCO Admin Building, Vamenta Boulevard, Brgy. Carmen, Cagayan de Oro. | 2023-12-08T13:45:42Z | 2023-12-20T13:51:21Z | [
"Template:Use Philippine English",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox radio station",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cagayan de Oro Radio",
"Template:Coord missing",
"Template:Philippines-radio-station-stub",
"Template:Short description"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DXCO-FM |
75,515,965 | Jinqiang International Event Center | The Jinqiang International Event Center is a 15,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. It is the new home of the Sichuan Blue Whales of the Chinese Basketball Association. The arena opened in 2023 and is considered one of China's most modern and well-equipped arenas.
The total construction area of the Jinqiang International Event Center is approximately 200,000 square meters. It consists of a large first-class stadium that can accommodate 15,000 people, a commercial center, and supporting facilities.
The Jinqiang International Event Center is designed to resemble a swimming blue whale, which is the mascot of the Sichuan Blue Whales. The exterior of the arena is modern and sleek, featuring a unique blue whale design inspired by the Yuyu civilization of Wenjiang, the birthplace of the ancient Shu Kingdom. The texture on the outside of the venue symbolizes the civilization's rich history and cultural heritage. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Jinqiang International Event Center is a 15,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. It is the new home of the Sichuan Blue Whales of the Chinese Basketball Association. The arena opened in 2023 and is considered one of China's most modern and well-equipped arenas.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The total construction area of the Jinqiang International Event Center is approximately 200,000 square meters. It consists of a large first-class stadium that can accommodate 15,000 people, a commercial center, and supporting facilities.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Jinqiang International Event Center is designed to resemble a swimming blue whale, which is the mascot of the Sichuan Blue Whales. The exterior of the arena is modern and sleek, featuring a unique blue whale design inspired by the Yuyu civilization of Wenjiang, the birthplace of the ancient Shu Kingdom. The texture on the outside of the venue symbolizes the civilization's rich history and cultural heritage.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | The Jinqiang International Event Center is a 15,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. It is the new home of the Sichuan Blue Whales of the Chinese Basketball Association. The arena opened in 2023 and is considered one of China's most modern and well-equipped arenas. The total construction area of the Jinqiang International Event Center is approximately 200,000 square meters. It consists of a large first-class stadium that can accommodate 15,000 people, a commercial center, and supporting facilities. The Jinqiang International Event Center is designed to resemble a swimming blue whale, which is the mascot of the Sichuan Blue Whales. The exterior of the arena is modern and sleek, featuring a unique blue whale design inspired by the Yuyu civilization of Wenjiang, the birthplace of the ancient Shu Kingdom. The texture on the outside of the venue symbolizes the civilization's rich history and cultural heritage. | 2023-12-08T13:50:13Z | 2023-12-12T12:36:05Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:China-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jinqiang_International_Event_Center |
75,515,989 | Genevieve Allen | Genevieve Allen (1881 – 1938) was an American suffragist, one of the pioneer suffrage workers of the state of California. She was the legislative head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party. She worked with Alice Paul, one of the founders of the National Woman's Party, and other important activists for women's suffrage and political rights in United States.
Born in 1881 in Connecticut, United States, Genevieve Allen was the daughter of John Allen and Margaret. She completed her higher education from Stanford University from 1902 to 1905. In most part of her life, she lived in San Francisco, from where she worked for women's suffrage in California. She was the executive secretary of the San Francisco Center of the California Civic League of Women Voters. In 1911, she was elected as the secretary of the College Equal Suffrage League of Northern California, where she also served as the head of its advertising committee.
While serving as the legislative head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party, on June 22, 1920, she contacted Senator Warren G. Harding, who was nominated as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party, to support the suffrage cause. In March 1933, she also wrote to William I. Traeger, member of the House of Representatives from California, asking him to support a legislation in eliminating the discrimination of women with regard to citizenship. she also worked in addressing a discriminatory clause in the Cable Act.
She married Alexander Allen, a journalist from California.
She died in 1938 at the age of 57. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Genevieve Allen (1881 – 1938) was an American suffragist, one of the pioneer suffrage workers of the state of California. She was the legislative head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party. She worked with Alice Paul, one of the founders of the National Woman's Party, and other important activists for women's suffrage and political rights in United States.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in 1881 in Connecticut, United States, Genevieve Allen was the daughter of John Allen and Margaret. She completed her higher education from Stanford University from 1902 to 1905. In most part of her life, she lived in San Francisco, from where she worked for women's suffrage in California. She was the executive secretary of the San Francisco Center of the California Civic League of Women Voters. In 1911, she was elected as the secretary of the College Equal Suffrage League of Northern California, where she also served as the head of its advertising committee.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "While serving as the legislative head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party, on June 22, 1920, she contacted Senator Warren G. Harding, who was nominated as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party, to support the suffrage cause. In March 1933, she also wrote to William I. Traeger, member of the House of Representatives from California, asking him to support a legislation in eliminating the discrimination of women with regard to citizenship. she also worked in addressing a discriminatory clause in the Cable Act.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She married Alexander Allen, a journalist from California.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "She died in 1938 at the age of 57.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] | Genevieve Allen was an American suffragist, one of the pioneer suffrage workers of the state of California. She was the legislative head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party. She worked with Alice Paul, one of the founders of the National Woman's Party, and other important activists for women's suffrage and political rights in United States. | 2023-12-08T13:55:35Z | 2023-12-29T17:27:44Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genevieve_Allen |
75,516,009 | Bakri Osman Saeed | Bakri Osman Saeed is president of the Association of African Universities. He is the former Pioneer Dean of St George’s International Medical School.
Bakri Osman Saeed is a Sudanese, a medical scientist. He was president of the Union of Sudanese Students in the United Kingdom and Ireland, London, (1982-1983).
Professor Bakri Osman Saeed received his bachelor degree from the University of Khartoum in the field of medicine and surgery and his PhD from University of Leeds, he became a doctor of medicine from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He started his academic career as a lecturer at the University of Khartoum in Sudan in 1985. He was also one time lecturer at King Saud University in Saudi Arabia.
He is the President of the Association of African Universities. He is also the president of Sudan International University. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bakri Osman Saeed is president of the Association of African Universities. He is the former Pioneer Dean of St George’s International Medical School.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Bakri Osman Saeed is a Sudanese, a medical scientist. He was president of the Union of Sudanese Students in the United Kingdom and Ireland, London, (1982-1983).",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Professor Bakri Osman Saeed received his bachelor degree from the University of Khartoum in the field of medicine and surgery and his PhD from University of Leeds, he became a doctor of medicine from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. He started his academic career as a lecturer at the University of Khartoum in Sudan in 1985. He was also one time lecturer at King Saud University in Saudi Arabia.",
"title": "Academics career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He is the President of the Association of African Universities. He is also the president of Sudan International University.",
"title": "Awards and honors"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Bakri Osman Saeed is president of the Association of African Universities. He is the former Pioneer Dean of St George’s International Medical School. | 2023-12-08T14:00:19Z | 2023-12-31T23:27:52Z | [
"Template:Primary sources",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Infobox scientist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Improve categories"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakri_Osman_Saeed |
75,516,016 | Esher Novices' Chase | The Esher Novices' Chase is a National Hunt steeplechase in Britain which is open to horses aged four years or older. It is run at Sandown Park over a distance of about 3 miles (3 miles and 37 yards, or 4,862 metres) and during the race there are 22 fences to be jumped. It is scheduled to take place each year in December. The race is for novices and it was established as a new race in 2023. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Esher Novices' Chase is a National Hunt steeplechase in Britain which is open to horses aged four years or older. It is run at Sandown Park over a distance of about 3 miles (3 miles and 37 yards, or 4,862 metres) and during the race there are 22 fences to be jumped. It is scheduled to take place each year in December. The race is for novices and it was established as a new race in 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | The Esher Novices' Chase is a National Hunt steeplechase in Britain which is open to horses aged four years or older. It is run at Sandown Park over a distance of about 3 miles and during the race there are 22 fences to be jumped. It is scheduled to take place each year in December. The race is for novices and it was established as a new race in 2023. | 2023-12-08T14:02:48Z | 2023-12-08T14:36:49Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Convert",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Racing Post",
"Template:Horseracing-race-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esher_Novices%27_Chase |
75,516,027 | Moodiarrup | Moodiarrup is a locality in Western Australia, located to the south of Darkan within the Shire of West Arthur. The locality is situated at an average elevation of 251 metres above the sea level. As of the 2021 Australian census, it had a population of 63. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Moodiarrup is a locality in Western Australia, located to the south of Darkan within the Shire of West Arthur. The locality is situated at an average elevation of 251 metres above the sea level. As of the 2021 Australian census, it had a population of 63.",
"title": ""
}
] | Moodiarrup is a locality in Western Australia, located to the south of Darkan within the Shire of West Arthur. The locality is situated at an average elevation of 251 metres above the sea level. As of the 2021 Australian census, it had a population of 63. | 2023-12-08T14:04:30Z | 2023-12-08T14:26:59Z | [
"Template:Infobox Australian place",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Towns Wheatbelt South WA",
"Template:WesternAustralia-geo-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moodiarrup |
75,516,038 | Surprise (Syd Straw album) | Surprise is the debut solo album by the American musician Syd Straw, released in 1989. The first single was "Future 40's (String of Pearls)". Straw supported the album with a North American tour, backed by a band that included D.J. Bonebrake and Dave Alvin. Surprise was a commercial disappointment.
The album was produced primarily by Straw, who also wrote or cowrote most of the songs. She spent more than year recording it at studios in London, New Orleans, New York, Austin, and Los Angeles. "Future 40's (String of Pearls)" was cowritten by Jody Harris and Michael Stipe. "Think Too Hard" was written by Peter Holsapple; Marshall Crenshaw played guitar on it. "Hard Times", coproduced by Van Dyke Parks, was composed by Stephen Foster. Richard Thompson played guitar on "Sphinx". John Doe contributed backing vocals to some of the tracks. Straw considered "The Unanswered Question?" to be a combination of pop music and opera.
The New York Times concluded that "perhaps the most striking cut on Surprise is 'Almost Magic', a diaphanously textured showcase of overdubbed vocals on a song in which Ms. Straw pleads for one more chance to hold together a crumbling relationship." Trouser Press determined that the album "boasts a guest list that suggests a hipper version of the bloated superstar processions Peter Asher used to assemble for James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt." The Los Angeles Times wrote that "the slower, softer [songs] ache or rage convincingly, a Talking Heads-style art-funk number hits its groove, a Dylanesque shaggy-dog story ambles along playfully."
Spin opined that "her voice, though beautifully pitched, lacks emotional range." The Globe and Mail called Surprise "both immediately accessible, full of familiar country and pop elements, and bursting with interesting little instrumental and vocal flourishes." The Washington Post deemed the songs "electric, eclectic folk-rock, with elliptical, fragmented lyrics ... and a tendency toward melodic meandering." The Sacramento Bee considered it one of 1989's best debut albums.
AllMusic wrote: "The album's style and production mix jangle pop elements from the preceding decade with a roots rock tone, and the overall result has a healthy folkish disposition. Surprise anticipates what was to come for females in rock during the '90s." | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Surprise is the debut solo album by the American musician Syd Straw, released in 1989. The first single was \"Future 40's (String of Pearls)\". Straw supported the album with a North American tour, backed by a band that included D.J. Bonebrake and Dave Alvin. Surprise was a commercial disappointment.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The album was produced primarily by Straw, who also wrote or cowrote most of the songs. She spent more than year recording it at studios in London, New Orleans, New York, Austin, and Los Angeles. \"Future 40's (String of Pearls)\" was cowritten by Jody Harris and Michael Stipe. \"Think Too Hard\" was written by Peter Holsapple; Marshall Crenshaw played guitar on it. \"Hard Times\", coproduced by Van Dyke Parks, was composed by Stephen Foster. Richard Thompson played guitar on \"Sphinx\". John Doe contributed backing vocals to some of the tracks. Straw considered \"The Unanswered Question?\" to be a combination of pop music and opera.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The New York Times concluded that \"perhaps the most striking cut on Surprise is 'Almost Magic', a diaphanously textured showcase of overdubbed vocals on a song in which Ms. Straw pleads for one more chance to hold together a crumbling relationship.\" Trouser Press determined that the album \"boasts a guest list that suggests a hipper version of the bloated superstar processions Peter Asher used to assemble for James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt.\" The Los Angeles Times wrote that \"the slower, softer [songs] ache or rage convincingly, a Talking Heads-style art-funk number hits its groove, a Dylanesque shaggy-dog story ambles along playfully.\"",
"title": "Critical reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Spin opined that \"her voice, though beautifully pitched, lacks emotional range.\" The Globe and Mail called Surprise \"both immediately accessible, full of familiar country and pop elements, and bursting with interesting little instrumental and vocal flourishes.\" The Washington Post deemed the songs \"electric, eclectic folk-rock, with elliptical, fragmented lyrics ... and a tendency toward melodic meandering.\" The Sacramento Bee considered it one of 1989's best debut albums.",
"title": "Critical reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "AllMusic wrote: \"The album's style and production mix jangle pop elements from the preceding decade with a roots rock tone, and the overall result has a healthy folkish disposition. Surprise anticipates what was to come for females in rock during the '90s.\"",
"title": "Critical reception"
}
] | Surprise is the debut solo album by the American musician Syd Straw, released in 1989. The first single was "Future 40's". Straw supported the album with a North American tour, backed by a band that included D.J. Bonebrake and Dave Alvin. Surprise was a commercial disappointment. | 2023-12-08T14:06:30Z | 2023-12-09T19:44:59Z | [
"Template:Music ratings",
"Template:Track listing",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite magazine",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Infobox album"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surprise_(Syd_Straw_album) |
75,516,040 | 2023 NBA In-Season Tournament championship game | The 2023 NBA In-Season Tournament championship game was the final game of the inaugural edition of the NBA In-Season Tournament. The game was played on December 9, 2023, in the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The game was contested by the Indiana Pacers out of the Eastern Conference and the Los Angeles Lakers of the Western Conference. Unlike other games, this game does not count towards the regular-season standings, nor affects the regular-season performances of the players.
The Lakers won the championship game by beating the Pacers 123–109, consequently clinching the first-ever NBA Cup title. The Lakers' Anthony Davis had a 41-point and 20-rebound game to lead the team, while LeBron James was named the In-Season Tournament MVP.
This was the Lakers' second season under Darvin Ham as head coach. At the day of the championship game, the Lakers were favored by 4.5 points to win the inaugural NBA Cup by odds makers. Before heading into the championship game, the Lakers were the 5th-placed team in the Western Conference with a 14–9 record.
The Pacers knocked off the Philadelphia 76ers in group stage play, the Boston Celtics in the quarter-finals, and the Milwaukee Bucks in the semi-finals, which meant they defeated the top-three Eastern Conference team from the last season. The Pacers had the league's best offense coming into the game. Before heading into the championship game, the Pacers were the 5th-placed team in the Eastern Conference with a 12–8 record in the regular season thus far.
Buddy Hield of Indiana scored the game's first basket when he hit a three-pointer. However, the Lakers quickly took control of the first quarter and led 20-15 after six minutes. After one frame, the Lakers led 34–29 with 26 points coming inside the paint. The teams went into half-time with a 60-65 advantage for Los Angeles.
The second half opened up with a LeBron James and-one play, and the Lakers quickly captured a 10-point lead. Despite cutting the lead to a five-point lead at one point, the Pacers went into the fourth quarter trailing 90–82.
The final quarter saw the Pacers crawl back into the game, cutting the lead down to two with 10:30 to go. However, Indiana was unable to keep up with the Lakers offense and were trailing by ten points with four and a half minute left. Indiana center Myles Turner fouled out after fouling Anthony Davis and picking up his sixth foul, with 4:09 to go in the game. Davis scored 10 straight point as part of the 13–0 run that gave the Lakers a 16-point lead with 3:11 remaining in the game. By then, the Lakers comfortably played the game out. The Lakers dominated the Pacers inside, edging them with a 86–44 edge in points in the paint.
The Lakers became the first team to win the NBA Cup. Anthony Davis finished with 41 points on 16-for-24 shooting, 20 rebounds and 4 blocks. Davis performance was the first 40+ points, 20+ rebounds and 5+ assists performance in the 36 years, and was the third Laker to achieve this feat following Elgin Baylor and Wilt Chamberlain. Tyrese Haliburton finished with 20 points and 11 assists, while Bennedict Mathurin scored 20 as well.
LeBron James won the inaugural Most Valuable Player award, following his averages of 26.4 points, 8.0 rebounds, 7.0 assists, while shooting 56.8% from the field and 60.6% on threes. Anthony Davis 41-point and 20-rebound performance was widely praised as a "masterpiece", as James described it as a "Shaq-like performance".
Commissioner Adam Silver told in a press conference after the game that he was satisfied with the inaugural In-Season Tournament and is open to changes to the format, including the tie-breakers in the group play and the alternate colored courts that were used during the tournament.
On December 19, the Lakers celebrated their win by hanging a championship banner in the Crypto.com Arena to honour their In-Season Tournament victory, ahead of their regular season game against the New York Knicks. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2023 NBA In-Season Tournament championship game was the final game of the inaugural edition of the NBA In-Season Tournament. The game was played on December 9, 2023, in the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The game was contested by the Indiana Pacers out of the Eastern Conference and the Los Angeles Lakers of the Western Conference. Unlike other games, this game does not count towards the regular-season standings, nor affects the regular-season performances of the players.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Lakers won the championship game by beating the Pacers 123–109, consequently clinching the first-ever NBA Cup title. The Lakers' Anthony Davis had a 41-point and 20-rebound game to lead the team, while LeBron James was named the In-Season Tournament MVP.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "This was the Lakers' second season under Darvin Ham as head coach. At the day of the championship game, the Lakers were favored by 4.5 points to win the inaugural NBA Cup by odds makers. Before heading into the championship game, the Lakers were the 5th-placed team in the Western Conference with a 14–9 record.",
"title": "Participants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Pacers knocked off the Philadelphia 76ers in group stage play, the Boston Celtics in the quarter-finals, and the Milwaukee Bucks in the semi-finals, which meant they defeated the top-three Eastern Conference team from the last season. The Pacers had the league's best offense coming into the game. Before heading into the championship game, the Pacers were the 5th-placed team in the Eastern Conference with a 12–8 record in the regular season thus far.",
"title": "Participants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Buddy Hield of Indiana scored the game's first basket when he hit a three-pointer. However, the Lakers quickly took control of the first quarter and led 20-15 after six minutes. After one frame, the Lakers led 34–29 with 26 points coming inside the paint. The teams went into half-time with a 60-65 advantage for Los Angeles.",
"title": "Game summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The second half opened up with a LeBron James and-one play, and the Lakers quickly captured a 10-point lead. Despite cutting the lead to a five-point lead at one point, the Pacers went into the fourth quarter trailing 90–82.",
"title": "Game summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The final quarter saw the Pacers crawl back into the game, cutting the lead down to two with 10:30 to go. However, Indiana was unable to keep up with the Lakers offense and were trailing by ten points with four and a half minute left. Indiana center Myles Turner fouled out after fouling Anthony Davis and picking up his sixth foul, with 4:09 to go in the game. Davis scored 10 straight point as part of the 13–0 run that gave the Lakers a 16-point lead with 3:11 remaining in the game. By then, the Lakers comfortably played the game out. The Lakers dominated the Pacers inside, edging them with a 86–44 edge in points in the paint.",
"title": "Game summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The Lakers became the first team to win the NBA Cup. Anthony Davis finished with 41 points on 16-for-24 shooting, 20 rebounds and 4 blocks. Davis performance was the first 40+ points, 20+ rebounds and 5+ assists performance in the 36 years, and was the third Laker to achieve this feat following Elgin Baylor and Wilt Chamberlain. Tyrese Haliburton finished with 20 points and 11 assists, while Bennedict Mathurin scored 20 as well.",
"title": "Game summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "",
"title": "Rosters"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "LeBron James won the inaugural Most Valuable Player award, following his averages of 26.4 points, 8.0 rebounds, 7.0 assists, while shooting 56.8% from the field and 60.6% on threes. Anthony Davis 41-point and 20-rebound performance was widely praised as a \"masterpiece\", as James described it as a \"Shaq-like performance\".",
"title": "Aftermath"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Commissioner Adam Silver told in a press conference after the game that he was satisfied with the inaugural In-Season Tournament and is open to changes to the format, including the tie-breakers in the group play and the alternate colored courts that were used during the tournament.",
"title": "Aftermath"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "On December 19, the Lakers celebrated their win by hanging a championship banner in the Crypto.com Arena to honour their In-Season Tournament victory, ahead of their regular season game against the New York Knicks.",
"title": "Aftermath"
}
] | The 2023 NBA In-Season Tournament championship game was the final game of the inaugural edition of the NBA In-Season Tournament. The game was played on December 9, 2023, in the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The game was contested by the Indiana Pacers out of the Eastern Conference and the Los Angeles Lakers of the Western Conference. Unlike other games, this game does not count towards the regular-season standings, nor affects the regular-season performances of the players. The Lakers won the championship game by beating the Pacers 123–109, consequently clinching the first-ever NBA Cup title. The Lakers' Anthony Davis had a 41-point and 20-rebound game to lead the team, while LeBron James was named the In-Season Tournament MVP. | 2023-12-08T14:06:40Z | 2023-12-29T18:33:17Z | [
"Template:Bs game mid",
"Template:Bs game coach",
"Template:NBA roster header",
"Template:Player2",
"Template:Main article",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Basketball kit",
"Template:NBA roster footer",
"Template:Basketballbox",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Use American English",
"Template:Infobox basketball game",
"Template:Main",
"2023 NBA In-Season Tournament",
"Template:Bs game header",
"Template:Bs game player",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:2023–24 NBA season by team",
"Template:0"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_NBA_In-Season_Tournament_championship_game |
75,516,056 | Jerry Tshabalala | Jerry Tshabalala is South African professional football manager and current head coach of the SAFA Women's League side Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies.
The Tembisa born native is one of the most decorated coaches in African women's football. He won the inaugural CAF Women's Champions League and the 2023 CAF Women's Champions League. He has won a record six SAFA Women's League titles.
Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies
In October 2012, Tshabalala became the manager of Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies.
In 2021, he won inaugural CAF Women's Champions League 2-0 against Hasaacas Ladies from Ghana making him the first CAF Women's Champions League winning coach. He was named coach of the year at the Hollywoodbets Super League awards 2021.
In 2022, his side were runner's up in the 2022 CAF Women's Champions League going down 4-0 to AS FAR from Morocco. He was named coach of the year at the Hollywoodbets Super League awards 2022.
He won his second CAF Women's Champions League in the 2023 CAF Women's Champions League 3-0 against Sporting Club Casablanca from Morocco. This made him the first coach to win two CAF Women's Champions League titles.
Manager
Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies
Individual | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Jerry Tshabalala is South African professional football manager and current head coach of the SAFA Women's League side Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Tembisa born native is one of the most decorated coaches in African women's football. He won the inaugural CAF Women's Champions League and the 2023 CAF Women's Champions League. He has won a record six SAFA Women's League titles.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies",
"title": "Coaching career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In October 2012, Tshabalala became the manager of Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies.",
"title": "Coaching career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2021, he won inaugural CAF Women's Champions League 2-0 against Hasaacas Ladies from Ghana making him the first CAF Women's Champions League winning coach. He was named coach of the year at the Hollywoodbets Super League awards 2021.",
"title": "Coaching career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2022, his side were runner's up in the 2022 CAF Women's Champions League going down 4-0 to AS FAR from Morocco. He was named coach of the year at the Hollywoodbets Super League awards 2022.",
"title": "Coaching career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "He won his second CAF Women's Champions League in the 2023 CAF Women's Champions League 3-0 against Sporting Club Casablanca from Morocco. This made him the first coach to win two CAF Women's Champions League titles.",
"title": "Coaching career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Manager",
"title": "Honours"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies",
"title": "Honours"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Individual",
"title": "Honours"
}
] | Jerry Tshabalala is South African professional football manager and current head coach of the SAFA Women's League side Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies. The Tembisa born native is one of the most decorated coaches in African women's football. He won the inaugural CAF Women's Champions League and the 2023 CAF Women's Champions League. He has won a record six SAFA Women's League titles. | 2023-12-08T14:11:04Z | 2023-12-31T17:23:24Z | [
"Template:SouthAfrica-footy-bio-stub",
"Template:Infobox football biography",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Tshabalala |
75,516,084 | Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry (disambiguation) | Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry may refer to: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] | Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry may refer to: Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry (basketball)
Beşiktaş–Fenerbahçe rivalry (football) | 2023-12-08T14:16:00Z | 2023-12-09T01:13:29Z | [] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Be%C5%9Fikta%C5%9F%E2%80%93Fenerbah%C3%A7e_rivalry_(disambiguation) |
75,516,088 | Your Christmas | [] | 2023-12-08T14:16:45Z | 2023-12-31T12:04:24Z | [
"Template:Redirect category shell"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Your_Christmas |
||
75,516,099 | Dimitrije Dimitrijević (Chetnik) | Dimitrije Dimitrijević (Serbian Cyrillic: Димитрије Димитријевић; Gjakova, Kosovo, Ottoman Empire, 1881-Niš, Serbia, 17 December 1917) was a priest and one of the leaders of the Toplica Uprising in the occupied Kingdom of Serbia during World War I.
He grew up in an artisan family and graduated from Prizren Seminary in 1898. He moved to Serbia around 1900, where he was a priest and teacher, serving along the then Serbian-Ottoman border.
He was one of the organizers of the Toplica Uprising and a head of the Jablanica Detachment [sr] of the Chetniks.
At the end of August 1917, in a conflict with the Bulgarian army on the Salonica front, Dimitrijević was wounded and captured. The Bulgarians imprisoned him in the Niš Fortress, where he was tortured to death. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dimitrije Dimitrijević (Serbian Cyrillic: Димитрије Димитријевић; Gjakova, Kosovo, Ottoman Empire, 1881-Niš, Serbia, 17 December 1917) was a priest and one of the leaders of the Toplica Uprising in the occupied Kingdom of Serbia during World War I.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He grew up in an artisan family and graduated from Prizren Seminary in 1898. He moved to Serbia around 1900, where he was a priest and teacher, serving along the then Serbian-Ottoman border.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "He was one of the organizers of the Toplica Uprising and a head of the Jablanica Detachment [sr] of the Chetniks.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "At the end of August 1917, in a conflict with the Bulgarian army on the Salonica front, Dimitrijević was wounded and captured. The Bulgarians imprisoned him in the Niš Fortress, where he was tortured to death.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Dimitrije Dimitrijević was a priest and one of the leaders of the Toplica Uprising in the occupied Kingdom of Serbia during World War I. He grew up in an artisan family and graduated from Prizren Seminary in 1898. He moved to Serbia around 1900, where he was a priest and teacher, serving along the then Serbian-Ottoman border. He was one of the organizers of the Toplica Uprising and a head of the Jablanica Detachment of the Chetniks. At the end of August 1917, in a conflict with the Bulgarian army on the Salonica front, Dimitrijević was wounded and captured. The Bulgarians imprisoned him in the Niš Fortress, where he was tortured to death. | 2023-12-08T14:18:05Z | 2023-12-29T03:47:28Z | [
"Template:Infobox military person",
"Template:Lang-sr-cyrl",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Serbia-hist-stub",
"Template:Ill",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Serbia-bio-stub",
"Template:Authority control"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimitrije_Dimitrijevi%C4%87_(Chetnik) |
75,516,116 | Dave Hemus | David John Hemus (born 10 June 1938 – March 2022) was an international motorcycle speedway rider from England. He earned one international cap for the Great Britain national speedway team.
Hemus, born in Birmingham, started as a cycle speedway rider before moving up to motorcycle speedway in 1962, riding a couple of matches for Wolverhampton Wolves during the latter part of the season after being signed by Bill Bridgett for £25. He was then appointed as a full time member of the track maintenance staff. He began his British leagues career riding for the Wolves during the 1963 Provincial Speedway League. The season ended in success after the team won the Provincial League title. The following season in 1964, he improved his average to 7.43.
He suffered a compound fracture of his left leg in late 1964, which forced him to miss the entire 1965 season. Hemus would continue to ride for Wolves for six years in total, until the end of the 1968 season and made 134 official appearances.
In 1969, he was allocated to the Newport Wasps by the British League Promoters' Association but he eventually joined Belle Vue Aces for the season. He was part of the Belle Vue team that won the league title during the 1970 British League season and 1971 British League season. After winning the league twice with the Manchester club he spent the winter in Rhodesia before being forced to leave Belle Vue, due to the points limits. He was allocated to Ipswich Witches but then joined Exeter Falcons for the 1972 season. His final season was in 1973, and when he opted not to join the Oxford Rebels he only managed a few rides for Belle Vue before emigrating to Rhodesia.
He died in March 2022. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "David John Hemus (born 10 June 1938 – March 2022) was an international motorcycle speedway rider from England. He earned one international cap for the Great Britain national speedway team.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Hemus, born in Birmingham, started as a cycle speedway rider before moving up to motorcycle speedway in 1962, riding a couple of matches for Wolverhampton Wolves during the latter part of the season after being signed by Bill Bridgett for £25. He was then appointed as a full time member of the track maintenance staff. He began his British leagues career riding for the Wolves during the 1963 Provincial Speedway League. The season ended in success after the team won the Provincial League title. The following season in 1964, he improved his average to 7.43.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "He suffered a compound fracture of his left leg in late 1964, which forced him to miss the entire 1965 season. Hemus would continue to ride for Wolves for six years in total, until the end of the 1968 season and made 134 official appearances.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1969, he was allocated to the Newport Wasps by the British League Promoters' Association but he eventually joined Belle Vue Aces for the season. He was part of the Belle Vue team that won the league title during the 1970 British League season and 1971 British League season. After winning the league twice with the Manchester club he spent the winter in Rhodesia before being forced to leave Belle Vue, due to the points limits. He was allocated to Ipswich Witches but then joined Exeter Falcons for the 1972 season. His final season was in 1973, and when he opted not to join the Oxford Rebels he only managed a few rides for Belle Vue before emigrating to Rhodesia.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "He died in March 2022.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] | David John Hemus was an international motorcycle speedway rider from England. He earned one international cap for the Great Britain national speedway team. | 2023-12-08T14:23:03Z | 2023-12-08T22:11:19Z | [
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use British English",
"Template:Infobox Speedway rider",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Hemus |
75,516,159 | 2024 in Kazakhstan | Events in the year 2024 in Kazakhstan.
Source: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in Kazakhstan.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] | Events in the year 2024 in Kazakhstan. | 2023-12-08T14:34:21Z | 2023-12-31T19:44:23Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Years in Kazakhstan",
"Template:Year in Asia",
"Template:Kazakhstan topics",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use American English",
"Template:Year in Kazakhstan",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Short description"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Kazakhstan |
75,516,163 | Meshal Al-Mutairi (footballer, born 1999) | Meshal Al-Mutairi (Arabic: مشعل المطيري, born 25 March 1999) is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Saudi Pro League club Abha.
Al-Mutairi began his career in the youth setups of Al-Ansar. On 17 July 2019, Al-Mutairi signed his first professional contract with the club. On 31 July 2022, Al-Mutairi joined derby rivals Ohod on a free transfer. On 21 June 2023, Al-Mutairi joined Pro League side Abha on a two-year deal. On 16 September 2023, Al-Mutairi made his debut for Abha in the 3–1 defeat to Al-Ettifaq. He came off the bench replacing Abdulelah Al-Shammeri in the 83rd minute. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Meshal Al-Mutairi (Arabic: مشعل المطيري, born 25 March 1999) is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Saudi Pro League club Abha.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Al-Mutairi began his career in the youth setups of Al-Ansar. On 17 July 2019, Al-Mutairi signed his first professional contract with the club. On 31 July 2022, Al-Mutairi joined derby rivals Ohod on a free transfer. On 21 June 2023, Al-Mutairi joined Pro League side Abha on a two-year deal. On 16 September 2023, Al-Mutairi made his debut for Abha in the 3–1 defeat to Al-Ettifaq. He came off the bench replacing Abdulelah Al-Shammeri in the 83rd minute.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Meshal Al-Mutairi is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Saudi Pro League club Abha. | 2023-12-08T14:35:00Z | 2023-12-25T08:50:32Z | [
"Template:Soccerway",
"Template:Abha Club squad",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox football biography",
"Template:Lang-ar",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meshal_Al-Mutairi_(footballer,_born_1999) |
75,516,184 | Rasa (restaurant) | Rasa was an Indian restaurant in Burlingame, California. The restaurant had received a Michelin star before closing in 2022. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Rasa was an Indian restaurant in Burlingame, California. The restaurant had received a Michelin star before closing in 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] | Rasa was an Indian restaurant in Burlingame, California. The restaurant had received a Michelin star before closing in 2022. | 2023-12-08T14:40:01Z | 2023-12-09T03:37:00Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasa_(restaurant) |
75,516,195 | Zia Victoria | Zia Victoria (born 2005) is an American songwriter and musician from New York. She signed with Warner Chappell Music at the age of 16 and wrote the anthem for Novak Djokovic Foundation at age 11.
At age 11, Zia Victoria performed on The Today Show, where she sang her original song, "Taking Flight." In 2016, she wrote the Novak Djokovic Foundation Anthem, an original song titled, “Do It For Someone Else.”
In 2021, at the age of 16, she signed with Warner Chappell Music.
Zia graduated from the Los Angeles Academy for Artists & Music Production (LAAMP), a collaborative music program for artists, producers, and songwriters, co-founded by the production collective Stargate, known for working with the most influential artists of our time (Beyoncé, Cold Play, Jennifer Hudson, Katy Perry, Ne-Yo, Rihanna, Selena Gomez and more).
While attending LAAMP, she worked on her debut EP, "05 BABY" with Stargate. During these sessions, Zia co-wrote and co-produced 16 songs, including her first single, "Everybody’s Gonna Die!". Her works are featured on Spotify playlists like New Music Friday and Fresh Finds.
In 2022, at age 17, Zia Victoria's cover of Seal’s song "Crazy" caught his attention, and Seal asked Zia to join him on stage for his 2023 summer shows in New York City and Los Angeles. In 2023, at age 18, Zia Victoria joined Seal as the opening act for his fall 2023 Europe tour including performances across the UK and Paris.
Also, Zia Victoria supports the nonprofit organization Youth Performance Institute (YPI), which provides mentorship and development opportunities for young people from various backgrounds.
In 2023, Zia Victoria released her rendition of one of Joni Mitchell's most acclaimed songs, ‘River,’ with a percentage of sales benefiting Jewel’s #NotAloneChallenge, a social media campaign which reminds people they're not alone and provides free mental health tools. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Zia Victoria (born 2005) is an American songwriter and musician from New York. She signed with Warner Chappell Music at the age of 16 and wrote the anthem for Novak Djokovic Foundation at age 11.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "At age 11, Zia Victoria performed on The Today Show, where she sang her original song, \"Taking Flight.\" In 2016, she wrote the Novak Djokovic Foundation Anthem, an original song titled, “Do It For Someone Else.”",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 2021, at the age of 16, she signed with Warner Chappell Music.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Zia graduated from the Los Angeles Academy for Artists & Music Production (LAAMP), a collaborative music program for artists, producers, and songwriters, co-founded by the production collective Stargate, known for working with the most influential artists of our time (Beyoncé, Cold Play, Jennifer Hudson, Katy Perry, Ne-Yo, Rihanna, Selena Gomez and more).",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "While attending LAAMP, she worked on her debut EP, \"05 BABY\" with Stargate. During these sessions, Zia co-wrote and co-produced 16 songs, including her first single, \"Everybody’s Gonna Die!\". Her works are featured on Spotify playlists like New Music Friday and Fresh Finds.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2022, at age 17, Zia Victoria's cover of Seal’s song \"Crazy\" caught his attention, and Seal asked Zia to join him on stage for his 2023 summer shows in New York City and Los Angeles. In 2023, at age 18, Zia Victoria joined Seal as the opening act for his fall 2023 Europe tour including performances across the UK and Paris.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Also, Zia Victoria supports the nonprofit organization Youth Performance Institute (YPI), which provides mentorship and development opportunities for young people from various backgrounds.",
"title": "Philanthropy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In 2023, Zia Victoria released her rendition of one of Joni Mitchell's most acclaimed songs, ‘River,’ with a percentage of sales benefiting Jewel’s #NotAloneChallenge, a social media campaign which reminds people they're not alone and provides free mental health tools.",
"title": "Philanthropy"
}
] | Zia Victoria is an American songwriter and musician from New York. She signed with Warner Chappell Music at the age of 16 and wrote the anthem for Novak Djokovic Foundation at age 11. | 2023-12-08T14:41:44Z | 2023-12-31T22:03:10Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zia_Victoria |
75,516,201 | William J. Leverett House | The William J. Leverett House is a historic house in the Nob Hill neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was built in 1928 and is a notable early example of the Pueblo Revival style. The property was listed on the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties in 1985 and the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is also a contributing property in the Monte Vista and College View Historic District.
The house was built as a personal residence and model home by William J. Leverett, the developer of the surrounding Monte Vista subdivision. It has been compared to the James N. Gladding House, which is also a Pueblo-style model home built around the same time in the Spruce Park neighborhood. The Leverett house is roughly rectangular in plan, one story high, and constructed from stuccoed adobe. It displays many characteristics of the Pueblo style such as vigas, irregular parapets, and front and rear portales or porticos with log posts and corbels. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The William J. Leverett House is a historic house in the Nob Hill neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was built in 1928 and is a notable early example of the Pueblo Revival style. The property was listed on the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties in 1985 and the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is also a contributing property in the Monte Vista and College View Historic District.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The house was built as a personal residence and model home by William J. Leverett, the developer of the surrounding Monte Vista subdivision. It has been compared to the James N. Gladding House, which is also a Pueblo-style model home built around the same time in the Spruce Park neighborhood. The Leverett house is roughly rectangular in plan, one story high, and constructed from stuccoed adobe. It displays many characteristics of the Pueblo style such as vigas, irregular parapets, and front and rear portales or porticos with log posts and corbels.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | The William J. Leverett House is a historic house in the Nob Hill neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was built in 1928 and is a notable early example of the Pueblo Revival style. The property was listed on the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties in 1985 and the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It is also a contributing property in the Monte Vista and College View Historic District. The house was built as a personal residence and model home by William J. Leverett, the developer of the surrounding Monte Vista subdivision. It has been compared to the James N. Gladding House, which is also a Pueblo-style model home built around the same time in the Spruce Park neighborhood. The Leverett house is roughly rectangular in plan, one story high, and constructed from stuccoed adobe. It displays many characteristics of the Pueblo style such as vigas, irregular parapets, and front and rear portales or porticos with log posts and corbels. | 2023-12-08T14:43:09Z | 2023-12-08T15:13:09Z | [
"Template:NRHP url",
"Template:NewMexico-NRHP-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox NRHP",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_J._Leverett_House |
75,516,209 | Aduram Meghwal | Aduram Meghwal is a current member of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly who represents the Chohtan Assembly constituency of Barmer district. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Aduram Meghwal is a current member of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly who represents the Chohtan Assembly constituency of Barmer district.",
"title": ""
}
] | Aduram Meghwal is a current member of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly who represents the Chohtan Assembly constituency of Barmer district. | 2023-12-08T14:44:25Z | 2023-12-09T04:46:25Z | [
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aduram_Meghwal |
75,516,214 | Shehar Lakhot | Shehar Lakhot is an Indian Hindi-language drama streaming television series written and directed by Navdeep Singh. It was produced under the banner of Offroad Films, and stars Priyanshu Painyuli, Shruthy Menon, Chandan Roy Sanyal and Kubbra Sait. The series premiered on Amazon Prime Video on November 30, 2023, and has received mixed reviews from critics.
The series was announced by Amazon Prime Video. The principal photography of the film started in mid-May 2022. Filming took place in Udaipur, Rajasthan, before wrapping up in November 2022. The trailer of the series was released on 13 September 2022. The series consisting of eight episodes premiered on Amazon Prime Video from 30 November 2023.
Abhimanyu Mathur gave the series a two-star rating out of five in his review for DNA. In her review for Rediff.com, Deepa Gahlot rated the series a 2.5 out of 5 stars. Subhash K. Jha gave the series a three-star rating out of five in his review for Times Now.
The series was reviewed by various other media publications, such as Firstpost, Moneycontrol and WION. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Shehar Lakhot is an Indian Hindi-language drama streaming television series written and directed by Navdeep Singh. It was produced under the banner of Offroad Films, and stars Priyanshu Painyuli, Shruthy Menon, Chandan Roy Sanyal and Kubbra Sait. The series premiered on Amazon Prime Video on November 30, 2023, and has received mixed reviews from critics.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The series was announced by Amazon Prime Video. The principal photography of the film started in mid-May 2022. Filming took place in Udaipur, Rajasthan, before wrapping up in November 2022. The trailer of the series was released on 13 September 2022. The series consisting of eight episodes premiered on Amazon Prime Video from 30 November 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Abhimanyu Mathur gave the series a two-star rating out of five in his review for DNA. In her review for Rediff.com, Deepa Gahlot rated the series a 2.5 out of 5 stars. Subhash K. Jha gave the series a three-star rating out of five in his review for Times Now.",
"title": "Reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The series was reviewed by various other media publications, such as Firstpost, Moneycontrol and WION.",
"title": "Reception"
}
] | Shehar Lakhot is an Indian Hindi-language drama streaming television series written and directed by Navdeep Singh. It was produced under the banner of Offroad Films, and stars Priyanshu Painyuli, Shruthy Menon, Chandan Roy Sanyal and Kubbra Sait. The series premiered on Amazon Prime Video on November 30, 2023, and has received mixed reviews from critics. | 2023-12-08T14:44:50Z | 2023-12-18T22:38:32Z | [
"Template:Infobox television",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Portal bar",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Amazon Prime Video original series",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shehar_Lakhot |
75,516,224 | Avraham Melnikov | Avraham Melnikov (June 16, 1892 – August 27, 1960) was a sculptor especially notable during the period of the Yishuv. His most famous work is the monument "The Roaring Lion" at the Kfar Giladi Cemetery in Tel Hai.
He was born in Serbia in 1892. He immigrated to the Land of Israel in 1918 as a soldier in the Jewish Legion. He began engaging with the art of sculpture from a young age. Following the British conquest of Beersheba, he created a statue of General Edmund Allenby, which was placed in a municipal garden in Beersheba. The statue was destroyed during the events of 1936-1939.
Melnikov participated in the Tower of David exhibitions, which took place annually in the 1920s and expressed the spirit of Hebrew art emerging in the Land of Israel. He created a unique style that combined a connection to the roots of the Jewish people with a primitive primordiality, distant from the European heritage, influenced by the ancient Assyrian sculpture. This was in contrast with the modern art trends of the Ecole de Paris influenced art, brought by Isaac Frenkel Frenel.
Melnikov was elected to the first committee of the Association of Painters and Sculptors in the Land of Israel, alongside Yosef Zaritsky and Reuven Rubin.
In 1925, Melnikov arrived in the Galilee and met with members of the Haganah under the leadership of Yitzhak Sadeh. When he saw the unmarked and exposed graves of the fallen from Tel Hai, he proposed erecting a large-scale sculpture as a memorial. The workers of the Haganah carved a massive stone and dragged it to the burial site. Boris Schatz, the founder of "Bezalel," organized fundraising that helped Melnikov with the costs of creating the monument. For several years, Melnikov labored on the sculpture and created the Roaring Lion monument, which became a national symbol. The monument was officially inaugurated in a solemn ceremony on the 7th of Adar, 22nd of February 1934.
In the 1930s, Melnikov left the Land of Israel to England, however he did not achieve success and recognition for his art. In London, he sculpted famous personalities, including Arturo Toscanini, Lady Melchett and her son, the statesmen Ernest Bevin and Winston Churchill, Lord Conway of Allington, Sarah Churchill, the writer Gilbert Murray, and others. Most of his "English" sculptures (around two hundred) were destroyed in an air raid by the German Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain during World War II in 1940-1941. In fact, only a photograph remains of the sculpture "The Ethiopian Jesus" (plaster, 1949-1948), as well as the terracotta sculpture "The Beggar" (date unknown) and the bust of the Yiddish poet Malka Locker (plaster, 1936).
In 1959, he returned to Israel, passing away in Haifa a year later, aged 68. He was buried alongside his wife, Charlotte Leib Neusenholz (who passed away in 1949), in Kfar Giladi, near the base of his famous creation, the Roaring Lion monument. He was survived by his daughter.
His statue, the awakening Jew is in Ramat Gan's national park.
His archive is stored in the National library of Israel
"100 Artists in Israel," Gabriel Talpir, Gazit Publishing, Tel Aviv, 1971.
"Melnikov, Ilana Ortar," Nathan Zach, University of Haifa Art Gallery, undated (1982?).
"Sources of Israeli Sculpture 1906-1939," Gideon Ofrat, Herzliya Museum of Art, 1990.
"On an Inverted Triangle Between Here and the Moon," Danny Dotan, Keter Publishing, 1993.
"This Year to That Year," Nathan Zach, United Kibbutz Publishing House, 2009, pp. 142–157." | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Avraham Melnikov (June 16, 1892 – August 27, 1960) was a sculptor especially notable during the period of the Yishuv. His most famous work is the monument \"The Roaring Lion\" at the Kfar Giladi Cemetery in Tel Hai.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was born in Serbia in 1892. He immigrated to the Land of Israel in 1918 as a soldier in the Jewish Legion. He began engaging with the art of sculpture from a young age. Following the British conquest of Beersheba, he created a statue of General Edmund Allenby, which was placed in a municipal garden in Beersheba. The statue was destroyed during the events of 1936-1939.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Melnikov participated in the Tower of David exhibitions, which took place annually in the 1920s and expressed the spirit of Hebrew art emerging in the Land of Israel. He created a unique style that combined a connection to the roots of the Jewish people with a primitive primordiality, distant from the European heritage, influenced by the ancient Assyrian sculpture. This was in contrast with the modern art trends of the Ecole de Paris influenced art, brought by Isaac Frenkel Frenel.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Melnikov was elected to the first committee of the Association of Painters and Sculptors in the Land of Israel, alongside Yosef Zaritsky and Reuven Rubin.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 1925, Melnikov arrived in the Galilee and met with members of the Haganah under the leadership of Yitzhak Sadeh. When he saw the unmarked and exposed graves of the fallen from Tel Hai, he proposed erecting a large-scale sculpture as a memorial. The workers of the Haganah carved a massive stone and dragged it to the burial site. Boris Schatz, the founder of \"Bezalel,\" organized fundraising that helped Melnikov with the costs of creating the monument. For several years, Melnikov labored on the sculpture and created the Roaring Lion monument, which became a national symbol. The monument was officially inaugurated in a solemn ceremony on the 7th of Adar, 22nd of February 1934.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In the 1930s, Melnikov left the Land of Israel to England, however he did not achieve success and recognition for his art. In London, he sculpted famous personalities, including Arturo Toscanini, Lady Melchett and her son, the statesmen Ernest Bevin and Winston Churchill, Lord Conway of Allington, Sarah Churchill, the writer Gilbert Murray, and others. Most of his \"English\" sculptures (around two hundred) were destroyed in an air raid by the German Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain during World War II in 1940-1941. In fact, only a photograph remains of the sculpture \"The Ethiopian Jesus\" (plaster, 1949-1948), as well as the terracotta sculpture \"The Beggar\" (date unknown) and the bust of the Yiddish poet Malka Locker (plaster, 1936).",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In 1959, he returned to Israel, passing away in Haifa a year later, aged 68. He was buried alongside his wife, Charlotte Leib Neusenholz (who passed away in 1949), in Kfar Giladi, near the base of his famous creation, the Roaring Lion monument. He was survived by his daughter.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "His statue, the awakening Jew is in Ramat Gan's national park.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "His archive is stored in the National library of Israel",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "\"100 Artists in Israel,\" Gabriel Talpir, Gazit Publishing, Tel Aviv, 1971.",
"title": "Further Reading"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "\"Melnikov, Ilana Ortar,\" Nathan Zach, University of Haifa Art Gallery, undated (1982?).",
"title": "Further Reading"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "\"Sources of Israeli Sculpture 1906-1939,\" Gideon Ofrat, Herzliya Museum of Art, 1990.",
"title": "Further Reading"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "\"On an Inverted Triangle Between Here and the Moon,\" Danny Dotan, Keter Publishing, 1993.",
"title": "Further Reading"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "\"This Year to That Year,\" Nathan Zach, United Kibbutz Publishing House, 2009, pp. 142–157.\"",
"title": "Further Reading"
}
] | Avraham Melnikov was a sculptor especially notable during the period of the Yishuv. His most famous work is the monument "The Roaring Lion" at the Kfar Giladi Cemetery in Tel Hai. | 2023-12-08T14:46:33Z | 2023-12-09T07:29:07Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avraham_Melnikov |
75,516,228 | Madcap (restaurant) | Madcap is a contemporary Asian restaurant in San Anselmo, California. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Madcap is a contemporary Asian restaurant in San Anselmo, California. The restaurant has received a Michelin star.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Madcap is a contemporary Asian restaurant in San Anselmo, California. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | 2023-12-08T14:47:32Z | 2023-12-09T03:31:42Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Coord missing"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madcap_(restaurant) |
75,516,253 | Akpınar, Muş | Akpınar is a village in the Muş District, Muş Province, in east Turkey.
There is a primary school in the village. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Akpınar is a village in the Muş District, Muş Province, in east Turkey.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "There is a primary school in the village.",
"title": "Education"
}
] | Akpınar is a village in the Muş District, Muş Province, in east Turkey. | 2023-12-08T14:51:45Z | 2023-12-08T14:58:21Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox Turkey place",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Muş-geo-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akp%C4%B1nar,_Mu%C5%9F |
75,516,281 | Julien Jabre | Julien Jabre (born November 1976) is a French-Lebanese electronic music composer, producer, and audio engineer. Specializing in house music, he is associated with the French house.
During the mid-'90s, three French house music pioneers, DJ Deep, DJ Gregory, and Alex from Tokyo, hosted a radio show dedicated to electronic music on the Parisian station FG. A fan of the show A Deep Groove, Julien Jabre met them in 1994 through a friend who was interning at the radio. He made his DJ debut during a guest appearance by DJ Gregory, who entrusted him with the decks for the first time. Over the next two years, he frequently appeared on the radio.
In 1997, the track "Faithfull" under the alias Fantom was released with Julien Jabre's as a producer. The success of Fantom was soon followed by "The Deep," another collaboration, this time with DJ Deep, and then Soha, a New York continuation of his partnership with Gregory. Simultaneously, he began releasing solo tracks on Basic Recordings, starting with "Jungle" and later the deep house EP "Time," which included tracks like "That Day" and "Delivrance".
In the early 2000s, Julien Jabre started gaining recognition with tracks like "Voodance" and "Yalopa". At the time, he distanced himself from the scene and DJing.His first full-length release, released in 2003, was a compilation The Disco-Tech of Julien Jabre. This selection was published on the Yellow Productions label.
That same year, he established his own label, Elias.
Throughout the rest of the decade, Julien Jabre collaborated with artists including Dimitri From Paris (particularly on official remixes for the group CHIC) and Martin Solveig, both in mixing and production capacities. Simultaneously, he continued his solo career. "Swimming Places," released in 2006, is revered as a house music classic. He started collaborating with the Venezuelan group Los Amigos Invisibles, mixing three tracks on the album "Comercial," which won a Latin Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album.
In 2009, he released the EP "Wonderland" on Defected, following the previous year's release of "Talking Walls". Also on Defected, the compilation DJ Gregory & Julien Jabre – House Masters was released.
During the 2010s, Julien Jabre worked as a producer, composer, and sound engineer on an international level.
In 2012, he gained attention by co-writing an album for Madonna, MDNA, alongside Martin Solveig. He co-wrote two tracks, including "I Don't Give A" performed as a duet with Nicki Minaj. In 2019, he co-produced "Thando" with South African producer Black Coffee.
In 2019, he resumed his solo career and released the EP "Samana" / "Far at Sea" on his label Elias.
Starting in 2007, Julien Jabre began working on film soundtracks. He partnered with Michael Tordjman (co-founder of Basic Recordings label). Their initial collaboration was on Stéphane Clavier's thriller film, Paris Under Watch. He subsequently composed scores for feature films like Aux yeux de tous by Cédric Jimenez (2012), Rattrapage by Tristan Séguéla (2017), and La Collection by Emmanuel Blanchard (2018).
Julien Jabre contributed to the American gospel group, The Joubert Singers, whose track "Stand on the Word" recorded in 1982 by Phyliss McKoy Joubert with her church choir, then released by Next Plateau in 1985. Julien Jabre convinced the record label, Universal, to re-record and release the track along with other recordings. Eventually, Universal opted to publish a remix under the name Keedz, which gained considerable success, notably as the theme song for Le Grand Journal on Canal+. The re-recorded and unreleased version of "Stand on the Word" with Phyliss McKoy Joubert was unveiled to the public in 2011 through the movie Polisse. In 2015, Julien Jabre released this version, along with the entire album re-recorded by Joubert with the children of the original choir members, on his label Elias. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Julien Jabre (born November 1976) is a French-Lebanese electronic music composer, producer, and audio engineer. Specializing in house music, he is associated with the French house.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "During the mid-'90s, three French house music pioneers, DJ Deep, DJ Gregory, and Alex from Tokyo, hosted a radio show dedicated to electronic music on the Parisian station FG. A fan of the show A Deep Groove, Julien Jabre met them in 1994 through a friend who was interning at the radio. He made his DJ debut during a guest appearance by DJ Gregory, who entrusted him with the decks for the first time. Over the next two years, he frequently appeared on the radio.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1997, the track \"Faithfull\" under the alias Fantom was released with Julien Jabre's as a producer. The success of Fantom was soon followed by \"The Deep,\" another collaboration, this time with DJ Deep, and then Soha, a New York continuation of his partnership with Gregory. Simultaneously, he began releasing solo tracks on Basic Recordings, starting with \"Jungle\" and later the deep house EP \"Time,\" which included tracks like \"That Day\" and \"Delivrance\".",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In the early 2000s, Julien Jabre started gaining recognition with tracks like \"Voodance\" and \"Yalopa\". At the time, he distanced himself from the scene and DJing.His first full-length release, released in 2003, was a compilation The Disco-Tech of Julien Jabre. This selection was published on the Yellow Productions label.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "That same year, he established his own label, Elias.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Throughout the rest of the decade, Julien Jabre collaborated with artists including Dimitri From Paris (particularly on official remixes for the group CHIC) and Martin Solveig, both in mixing and production capacities. Simultaneously, he continued his solo career. \"Swimming Places,\" released in 2006, is revered as a house music classic. He started collaborating with the Venezuelan group Los Amigos Invisibles, mixing three tracks on the album \"Comercial,\" which won a Latin Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In 2009, he released the EP \"Wonderland\" on Defected, following the previous year's release of \"Talking Walls\". Also on Defected, the compilation DJ Gregory & Julien Jabre – House Masters was released.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "During the 2010s, Julien Jabre worked as a producer, composer, and sound engineer on an international level.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In 2012, he gained attention by co-writing an album for Madonna, MDNA, alongside Martin Solveig. He co-wrote two tracks, including \"I Don't Give A\" performed as a duet with Nicki Minaj. In 2019, he co-produced \"Thando\" with South African producer Black Coffee.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In 2019, he resumed his solo career and released the EP \"Samana\" / \"Far at Sea\" on his label Elias.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Starting in 2007, Julien Jabre began working on film soundtracks. He partnered with Michael Tordjman (co-founder of Basic Recordings label). Their initial collaboration was on Stéphane Clavier's thriller film, Paris Under Watch. He subsequently composed scores for feature films like Aux yeux de tous by Cédric Jimenez (2012), Rattrapage by Tristan Séguéla (2017), and La Collection by Emmanuel Blanchard (2018).",
"title": "Film Music"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Julien Jabre contributed to the American gospel group, The Joubert Singers, whose track \"Stand on the Word\" recorded in 1982 by Phyliss McKoy Joubert with her church choir, then released by Next Plateau in 1985. Julien Jabre convinced the record label, Universal, to re-record and release the track along with other recordings. Eventually, Universal opted to publish a remix under the name Keedz, which gained considerable success, notably as the theme song for Le Grand Journal on Canal+. The re-recorded and unreleased version of \"Stand on the Word\" with Phyliss McKoy Joubert was unveiled to the public in 2011 through the movie Polisse. In 2015, Julien Jabre released this version, along with the entire album re-recorded by Joubert with the children of the original choir members, on his label Elias.",
"title": "The Joubert Singers"
}
] | Julien Jabre is a French-Lebanese electronic music composer, producer, and audio engineer. Specializing in house music, he is associated with the French house. | 2023-12-08T14:56:44Z | 2023-12-30T10:26:45Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox musical artist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julien_Jabre |
75,516,289 | Ralph Peña | [] | 2023-12-08T14:58:09Z | 2023-12-08T15:08:05Z | [
"Template:Redirect category shell"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Pe%C3%B1a |
||
75,516,298 | Ferrero | Ferrero may refer to: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ferrero may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] | Ferrero may refer to: Ferrero (surname), a surname | 2023-12-08T14:59:16Z | 2023-12-08T16:29:13Z | [
"Template:Disambiguation"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrero |
75,516,305 | 2024 F4 Brazilian Championship | The 2024 F4 Brazilian Championship will be the third season of the F4 Brazilian Championship. It is a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations.
The schedule was revealed on 1 December 2023. All but one round ran alongside 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix will support 2024 Stock Car Pro Series events. For the first time in the championship history, one competition will be held abroad in Argentina. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2024 F4 Brazilian Championship will be the third season of the F4 Brazilian Championship. It is a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The schedule was revealed on 1 December 2023. All but one round ran alongside 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix will support 2024 Stock Car Pro Series events. For the first time in the championship history, one competition will be held abroad in Argentina.",
"title": "Race calendar"
}
] | The 2024 F4 Brazilian Championship will be the third season of the F4 Brazilian Championship. It is a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars regulated according to FIA Formula 4 regulations. | 2023-12-08T15:00:02Z | 2023-12-11T13:37:09Z | [
"Template:Motorsport season",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Notelist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Official website",
"Template:FIA F4 Championships"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_F4_Brazilian_Championship |
75,516,316 | Kurumazushi | Kurumazushi is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kurumazushi is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Kurumazushi is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | 2023-12-08T15:02:18Z | 2023-12-09T03:40:15Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Coord missing",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurumazushi |
75,516,328 | Resisting AI: An Anti-fascist Approach to Artificial Intelligence | Resisting AI: An Anti-fascist Approach to Artificial Intelligence is a book on artificial intelligence (AI) by Dan McQuillan, published in 2022 by Bristol University Press.
Mc Quillan's Resisting AI contrasts optimistic visions about AI's potential by arguing that AI may best be seen as a continuation and reinforcement of bureaucratic forms of discrimination, violence, ultimately fostering authoritarian outcomes. For the author AI's promises of objective calculability is antithetical to an egalitarian and just society.
The author uses the expression ‘AI violence’ to describe how – based on opaque proprietary algorithms – various actors can inflict damage or discriminate categories of people from accessing jobs, loans, medical care or other benefits.
The analysis goes beyond the known critique of AI systems fostering precarious labour markets, addressing necropolitics, the politics of who is entitled to live, and who to die.
Although the author offers a brief history of machine learning at the beginning of the book – with its need for 'hidden and undercompensated labour', he is concerned more with the social impacts of AI rather than with its technical aspects. McQuillan sees AI as the continuation of existing bureaucratic systems that already marginalize vulnerable groups - aggravated by the fact that AI systems trained on existing data are likely to reinforce existing discriminations, e.g. in attempting to optimize welfare distribution based on existing data patterns. In elaborating on the continuation between existing bureaucratic violence and AI, he reconnect to Hannah Arendt concept of thoughtlessness. The thoughtless bureaucrat of Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil becomes now the algorithm that, lacking intent, cannot be accountable, and is thus endowed with an 'algorithmic thoughtlessness', pp. 62-63.
AI can support the diffusion of states of exception:
AI has an inbuilt tendency toward creating partial states of exception. AI is not only a technology that is impossible to properly regulate but a mechanism for multiplying exceptions more widely, p. 75.
An example of a scenario where AI systems of surveillance could bring discrimination to a new high is the initiative to create LGBT-free zones in Poland, pp. 76–77.).
Skeptical of ethical regulations to control the technology, Mc Quillan suggests people's councils and workers’ councils, and other forms of citizens agency to resist AI. A chapter entitled 'Post-Machine Learning' makes an appeal for resistance via currents of thought from Feminist science (standpoint theory), Post-normal science (Extended Peer Communities), and New materialism. Among the virtuous example of resistance - to be possibly adopted by the AI workers themselves - Mc Quillan notes (p. 126,141) the Lucas Plan of the workers of Lucas Aerospace Corporation, where a workforce declared redundant took control reorienting the enterprise toward useful products. In an intetview about the book, McQuillan defines himself as an 'AI abolitionist'.
Notwithstanding the ‘fascist’ in the title of the work, the author notes that while not all AI is fascist, this emerging technology of control may end up being deployed by fascist or authoritarian regimes. On the critical side, more than one review points to a partial disconnect between the broad social critique of the work and its anchoring to the workings of AI. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Resisting AI: An Anti-fascist Approach to Artificial Intelligence is a book on artificial intelligence (AI) by Dan McQuillan, published in 2022 by Bristol University Press.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Mc Quillan's Resisting AI contrasts optimistic visions about AI's potential by arguing that AI may best be seen as a continuation and reinforcement of bureaucratic forms of discrimination, violence, ultimately fostering authoritarian outcomes. For the author AI's promises of objective calculability is antithetical to an egalitarian and just society.",
"title": "Synopsis"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The author uses the expression ‘AI violence’ to describe how – based on opaque proprietary algorithms – various actors can inflict damage or discriminate categories of people from accessing jobs, loans, medical care or other benefits.",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The analysis goes beyond the known critique of AI systems fostering precarious labour markets, addressing necropolitics, the politics of who is entitled to live, and who to die.",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Although the author offers a brief history of machine learning at the beginning of the book – with its need for 'hidden and undercompensated labour', he is concerned more with the social impacts of AI rather than with its technical aspects. McQuillan sees AI as the continuation of existing bureaucratic systems that already marginalize vulnerable groups - aggravated by the fact that AI systems trained on existing data are likely to reinforce existing discriminations, e.g. in attempting to optimize welfare distribution based on existing data patterns. In elaborating on the continuation between existing bureaucratic violence and AI, he reconnect to Hannah Arendt concept of thoughtlessness. The thoughtless bureaucrat of Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil becomes now the algorithm that, lacking intent, cannot be accountable, and is thus endowed with an 'algorithmic thoughtlessness', pp. 62-63.",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "AI can support the diffusion of states of exception:",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "AI has an inbuilt tendency toward creating partial states of exception. AI is not only a technology that is impossible to properly regulate but a mechanism for multiplying exceptions more widely, p. 75.",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "An example of a scenario where AI systems of surveillance could bring discrimination to a new high is the initiative to create LGBT-free zones in Poland, pp. 76–77.).",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Skeptical of ethical regulations to control the technology, Mc Quillan suggests people's councils and workers’ councils, and other forms of citizens agency to resist AI. A chapter entitled 'Post-Machine Learning' makes an appeal for resistance via currents of thought from Feminist science (standpoint theory), Post-normal science (Extended Peer Communities), and New materialism. Among the virtuous example of resistance - to be possibly adopted by the AI workers themselves - Mc Quillan notes (p. 126,141) the Lucas Plan of the workers of Lucas Aerospace Corporation, where a workforce declared redundant took control reorienting the enterprise toward useful products. In an intetview about the book, McQuillan defines himself as an 'AI abolitionist'.",
"title": "Main"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Notwithstanding the ‘fascist’ in the title of the work, the author notes that while not all AI is fascist, this emerging technology of control may end up being deployed by fascist or authoritarian regimes. On the critical side, more than one review points to a partial disconnect between the broad social critique of the work and its anchoring to the workings of AI.",
"title": "Main"
}
] | Resisting AI: An Anti-fascist Approach to Artificial Intelligence is a book on artificial intelligence (AI) by Dan McQuillan, published in 2022 by Bristol University Press. | 2023-12-08T15:05:22Z | 2023-12-28T17:56:35Z | [
"Template:Italic title",
"Template:Blockquote",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Essay-like"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resisting_AI:_An_Anti-fascist_Approach_to_Artificial_Intelligence |
75,516,336 | Satsuki (restaurant) | Satsuki is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Satsuki is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Satsuki is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | 2023-12-08T15:07:11Z | 2023-12-09T03:22:38Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Coord missing"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satsuki_(restaurant) |
75,516,348 | Jab Harry Met Sejal (soundtrack) | Jab Harry Met Sejal is the soundtrack to the 2017 film of the same name directed by Imtiaz Ali and stars Anushka Sharma and Shah Rukh Khan. The film's music is composed by Pritam and lyrics were written by Irshad Kamil. The soundtrack accompanied 13 songs which was released by Sony Music India on 30 July 2017.
Jab Harry Met Sejal is Pritam's third collaboration with Ali after Jab We Met (2007) and Love Aaj Kal (2009). The music rights for the film were acquired by Sony Music India for ₹15 crore (US$1.9 million).
The first song from the soundtrack "Radha" was released as a single on 21 June 2017, coincided with World Music Day; the track was performed by Shahid Mallya and Sunidhi Chauhan. Upon its release, the track crossed 6 million views within less than 24 hours of its release. Owing to its success, the song was released in multiple languages for promotional purposes in Tamil ("Vandhaale Radha"), Telugu ("Nene Nee Radha"), Bengali ("Ami Holam Tomar Radha") and Arabic ("Ami Holam Tomar Radha"). The Tamil and Telugu versions were sung by Shashaa Tirupati, while the Bengali and Arabic versions were respectively sung by Pragya Dasgupta and Shaimaa ElShayeb. The second song "Beech Beech Main" is a party number, featuring Khan and Sharma. Sung by Arijit Singh, Shalmali Kholgade and Shefali Alvares, the song was released on 1 July 2017.
The third song "Safar" performed by Singh was released on 10 July 2017. The music video was preceded with an interaction between Kamil, Khan and Pritam regarding the song's curation and compositon, which Scroll.in described it as an innovative way to promote the film. The fourth song "Butterfly", sung by Dev Negi, Chauhan, Aman Trikha and Nooran Sisters was released on 19 July 2017. The film version of the song was mixed with a tumbi track, that was absent in the final mastering which was sent to the music platforms. The fourth song "Hawayein" performed by Singh was released on 26 July 2017. It became the most streamed song with its music video being viewed 9.8 million times within 24 hours on YouTube. Pritam said that he did not expect the song to be a huge success, while Sanujeet Bhujabal, marketing director at Sony Music India described it as a "never-heard-before phenomenon".
On 23 July 2017, Khan announced on Twitter that American DJ Diplo had composed a song "Phurrr" with Pritam. A mix of bhangra and electronic music, the song was sung by Diplo, Mohit Chauhan and Tushar Joshi and was released on 3 August. The film version was solely composed by Pritam, without Diplo's involvement, which was included in the soundtrack. The 13-track album was released on 30 July 2017.
Post the film's release, on 8 August 2017, Pritam announced that he would take a one-year sabbatical, without signing new projects until the release of Kalank (2019).
Manish Gaekwad of Film Companion wrote "The album piles on with so many tracks [...] and sometimes that is precisely why one cannot take it anymore." Joginder Tuteja of Bollywood Hungama rated 4 out of 5 saying "The music of Jab Harry Met Sejal is already popular and it is all set to enjoy a good run in weeks and months to come as well." Vipin Nair of Music Aloud wrote "Composing for Imtiaz Ali after a gap of eight years, Pritam returns with a vengeance, giving him the team’s biggest and best soundtrack yet in Jab Harry Met Sejal." Debarati S Sen of The Times of India commented that they have made an "enjoyable album", "which captures the usual genres that characterises a typical Bollywood film, well enough". Pradeep Menon of Firstpost called "Safar" as "one of Pritam’s most captivating songs yet". Milliblog wrote "Close on the heels of the magnificent Jagga Jasoos, Pritam ups the ante in Jab Harry Met Sejal, in what seems to be his best year yet!" Suanshu Khurana of The Indian Express called it as "a mix of brilliant and some completely ordinary tracks". Shantanu David of News18 stated that the album has "both hits and misses". | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Jab Harry Met Sejal is the soundtrack to the 2017 film of the same name directed by Imtiaz Ali and stars Anushka Sharma and Shah Rukh Khan. The film's music is composed by Pritam and lyrics were written by Irshad Kamil. The soundtrack accompanied 13 songs which was released by Sony Music India on 30 July 2017.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Jab Harry Met Sejal is Pritam's third collaboration with Ali after Jab We Met (2007) and Love Aaj Kal (2009). The music rights for the film were acquired by Sony Music India for ₹15 crore (US$1.9 million).",
"title": "Background and release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The first song from the soundtrack \"Radha\" was released as a single on 21 June 2017, coincided with World Music Day; the track was performed by Shahid Mallya and Sunidhi Chauhan. Upon its release, the track crossed 6 million views within less than 24 hours of its release. Owing to its success, the song was released in multiple languages for promotional purposes in Tamil (\"Vandhaale Radha\"), Telugu (\"Nene Nee Radha\"), Bengali (\"Ami Holam Tomar Radha\") and Arabic (\"Ami Holam Tomar Radha\"). The Tamil and Telugu versions were sung by Shashaa Tirupati, while the Bengali and Arabic versions were respectively sung by Pragya Dasgupta and Shaimaa ElShayeb. The second song \"Beech Beech Main\" is a party number, featuring Khan and Sharma. Sung by Arijit Singh, Shalmali Kholgade and Shefali Alvares, the song was released on 1 July 2017.",
"title": "Background and release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The third song \"Safar\" performed by Singh was released on 10 July 2017. The music video was preceded with an interaction between Kamil, Khan and Pritam regarding the song's curation and compositon, which Scroll.in described it as an innovative way to promote the film. The fourth song \"Butterfly\", sung by Dev Negi, Chauhan, Aman Trikha and Nooran Sisters was released on 19 July 2017. The film version of the song was mixed with a tumbi track, that was absent in the final mastering which was sent to the music platforms. The fourth song \"Hawayein\" performed by Singh was released on 26 July 2017. It became the most streamed song with its music video being viewed 9.8 million times within 24 hours on YouTube. Pritam said that he did not expect the song to be a huge success, while Sanujeet Bhujabal, marketing director at Sony Music India described it as a \"never-heard-before phenomenon\".",
"title": "Background and release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "On 23 July 2017, Khan announced on Twitter that American DJ Diplo had composed a song \"Phurrr\" with Pritam. A mix of bhangra and electronic music, the song was sung by Diplo, Mohit Chauhan and Tushar Joshi and was released on 3 August. The film version was solely composed by Pritam, without Diplo's involvement, which was included in the soundtrack. The 13-track album was released on 30 July 2017.",
"title": "Background and release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Post the film's release, on 8 August 2017, Pritam announced that he would take a one-year sabbatical, without signing new projects until the release of Kalank (2019).",
"title": "Background and release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Manish Gaekwad of Film Companion wrote \"The album piles on with so many tracks [...] and sometimes that is precisely why one cannot take it anymore.\" Joginder Tuteja of Bollywood Hungama rated 4 out of 5 saying \"The music of Jab Harry Met Sejal is already popular and it is all set to enjoy a good run in weeks and months to come as well.\" Vipin Nair of Music Aloud wrote \"Composing for Imtiaz Ali after a gap of eight years, Pritam returns with a vengeance, giving him the team’s biggest and best soundtrack yet in Jab Harry Met Sejal.\" Debarati S Sen of The Times of India commented that they have made an \"enjoyable album\", \"which captures the usual genres that characterises a typical Bollywood film, well enough\". Pradeep Menon of Firstpost called \"Safar\" as \"one of Pritam’s most captivating songs yet\". Milliblog wrote \"Close on the heels of the magnificent Jagga Jasoos, Pritam ups the ante in Jab Harry Met Sejal, in what seems to be his best year yet!\" Suanshu Khurana of The Indian Express called it as \"a mix of brilliant and some completely ordinary tracks\". Shantanu David of News18 stated that the album has \"both hits and misses\".",
"title": "Reception"
}
] | Jab Harry Met Sejal is the soundtrack to the 2017 film of the same name directed by Imtiaz Ali and stars Anushka Sharma and Shah Rukh Khan. The film's music is composed by Pritam and lyrics were written by Irshad Kamil. The soundtrack accompanied 13 songs which was released by Sony Music India on 30 July 2017. | 2023-12-08T15:08:54Z | 2023-12-25T01:30:48Z | [
"Template:INRConvert",
"Template:Ref.",
"Template:Nom",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite AV media",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Infobox album",
"Template:Cite tweet",
"Template:Track listing",
"Template:Won",
"Template:Cite magazine",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jab_Harry_Met_Sejal_(soundtrack) |
75,516,367 | Haksever, Varto | Haksever is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey.
Haksever and the plateau used for animal husbandry are located on the Şerafettin Mountains.
There is a secondary school in the village. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Haksever is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Haksever and the plateau used for animal husbandry are located on the Şerafettin Mountains.",
"title": "Geology and geography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "There is a secondary school in the village.",
"title": "Education"
}
] | Haksever is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey. | 2023-12-08T15:11:04Z | 2023-12-10T01:24:15Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox Turkey place",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:EAnatolia-geo-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haksever,_Varto |
75,516,371 | Altona murder | The Altona murder occurred in Altona, Manitoba, Canada, on November 17, 1990. One victim, aged 15, was murdered by a 17-year-old boy named Earl Giesbrecht.
The perpetrator was arrested shortly after, and confessed to the murder. Despite being a juvenile offender, he was prosecuted and convicted to life in prison. Thirty years later, in 2020, Giesbrecht was granted a conditional release. The murder and subsequent release of the perpetrator gained attention from Canadian media.
On the night of November 17, 1990, 14-year-old Tyler Pelke and 15-year-old Curtis Klassen were at Pelke's home, after attending an event for their hockey team. While watching The Hunt for Red October, 17-year-old Earl Giesbrecht knocked on their door. Giesbrecht threatened the boys with a .357 Magnum. After tying up, torturing a sexually assaulting them, Giesbrecht lit the house on fire.
Despite his injuries, including a slit throat and third-degree burns to 25% of his body, Pelke managed to escape and alerted a neighbour. Klassen perished in the fire.
Classmates described Giesbrecht as a "bully" and "manipulative". During his trial, Giesbrecht testified he had been molested as a child, and bullied for being gay. He had "revenge fantasies" after Pelke and Klassen made a demeaning comment to him. Giesbrecht was convicted of first-degree murder and attempted murder, and although 17, sentenced to life in prison in Rockwood Institution with no parole until 2015.
Described as a model inmate, Giesbrecht earned degrees in business administration and human resources. Pelke later became a firefighter, inspirational speaker and victim's rights advocate, visiting and forgiving Giesbrecht while he was in prison. Giesbrecht was granted temporary absences from prison starting in 2010, against Pelke's testimony that, "A life sentence was given and, as such, should be served." In 2020, Giesbrecht was granted full parole, a conditional release that allows an offender to serve part of a prison sentence in the community, though he was forbidden from returning to Altona.
A documentary about the murder, Altona, premiered in 2023 at the Whistler Film Festival, winning the Best Documentary. Giesbrecht, although not appearing on camera, agreed to an interview which was transcribed and read by an actor in the documentary. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Altona murder occurred in Altona, Manitoba, Canada, on November 17, 1990. One victim, aged 15, was murdered by a 17-year-old boy named Earl Giesbrecht.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The perpetrator was arrested shortly after, and confessed to the murder. Despite being a juvenile offender, he was prosecuted and convicted to life in prison. Thirty years later, in 2020, Giesbrecht was granted a conditional release. The murder and subsequent release of the perpetrator gained attention from Canadian media.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On the night of November 17, 1990, 14-year-old Tyler Pelke and 15-year-old Curtis Klassen were at Pelke's home, after attending an event for their hockey team. While watching The Hunt for Red October, 17-year-old Earl Giesbrecht knocked on their door. Giesbrecht threatened the boys with a .357 Magnum. After tying up, torturing a sexually assaulting them, Giesbrecht lit the house on fire.",
"title": "Murder"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Despite his injuries, including a slit throat and third-degree burns to 25% of his body, Pelke managed to escape and alerted a neighbour. Klassen perished in the fire.",
"title": "Murder"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Classmates described Giesbrecht as a \"bully\" and \"manipulative\". During his trial, Giesbrecht testified he had been molested as a child, and bullied for being gay. He had \"revenge fantasies\" after Pelke and Klassen made a demeaning comment to him. Giesbrecht was convicted of first-degree murder and attempted murder, and although 17, sentenced to life in prison in Rockwood Institution with no parole until 2015.",
"title": "Aftermath and controversy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Described as a model inmate, Giesbrecht earned degrees in business administration and human resources. Pelke later became a firefighter, inspirational speaker and victim's rights advocate, visiting and forgiving Giesbrecht while he was in prison. Giesbrecht was granted temporary absences from prison starting in 2010, against Pelke's testimony that, \"A life sentence was given and, as such, should be served.\" In 2020, Giesbrecht was granted full parole, a conditional release that allows an offender to serve part of a prison sentence in the community, though he was forbidden from returning to Altona.",
"title": "Aftermath and controversy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "A documentary about the murder, Altona, premiered in 2023 at the Whistler Film Festival, winning the Best Documentary. Giesbrecht, although not appearing on camera, agreed to an interview which was transcribed and read by an actor in the documentary.",
"title": "Aftermath and controversy"
}
] | The Altona murder occurred in Altona, Manitoba, Canada, on November 17, 1990. One victim, aged 15, was murdered by a 17-year-old boy named Earl Giesbrecht. The perpetrator was arrested shortly after, and confessed to the murder. Despite being a juvenile offender, he was prosecuted and convicted to life in prison. Thirty years later, in 2020, Giesbrecht was granted a conditional release. The murder and subsequent release of the perpetrator gained attention from Canadian media. | 2023-12-08T15:12:06Z | 2023-12-27T08:26:26Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox civilian attack"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altona_murder |
75,516,372 | Sushi Inoue | Sushi Inoue is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sushi Inoue is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Sushi Inoue is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | 2023-12-08T15:12:06Z | 2023-12-09T03:39:58Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Coord missing"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sushi_Inoue |
75,516,379 | Malta (Malta parish) | Malta (until 1936 Borovaja) is a village in the eastern part of Latvia, in Latgale. The center of Malta Parish of Rēzekne Municipality is 21 km from Rēzekne.
Local government institutions in the village: Malta High School, Malta Music School, Malta Pre-School Educational Institution "Dzīpariņš", House of Culture, Malta Parish Library, Children and Youth Center, History Museum, Malta Municipalities Ltd. company, Center for Health and Social Care.
The special primary school of Rēzekne Municipality under the responsibility of Rēzekne municipality is located in Malta.
The origin of the name 'Malta' is not clearly documented – it may be related to the verb 'malt'.
The beginnings of Malta are connected with Rozentova manor, information about which can be found in the 16th century. After the change of some owners, at the time of the 1784 general survey, there were 23 villages and 76 homesteads in the manor. The peasants cultivated 200 tenths of land for the lord, the men also engaged in beekeeping, and the women in weaving.
The last owners of the manor, the Bogomolets family, founded a flax processing factory and a dairy there, which began with the request of the nobleman Filip Mihail Bogomolets on 17 October 1897, to the Vitebsk gubernatorial board for the installation of a milk heating and milk production plant with two steam boilers. The dairy got the patented name "Rozentovo" and produced dairy products, including cheeses of various varieties. The company received awards for quality in London, St. Petersburg, Warsaw, Daugavpils.
In 1836 the Petersburg–Warsaw highway was built through the territory of present-day Malta, and later, in 1861, the Petersburg-Warsaw railway line with the Antonopole railway station was opened. Moving from the nearby Rozentova manor towards the newly built railway station, a new settlement was formed – Borovaja, which, thanks to its advantageous location at the intersection of four roads and on the side of the railway, soon became the main trading point of the area.
1873 the first folk school of Rozentova was founded in the parish house.
In 1933, Borovaja was granted the status of a densely populated place (village). 1937. In 1990, the village of Borovaja was renamed Malta (until then Malta was called the current Silmala) the settlement had 139 houses with 715 inhabitants and several dozen shops, which were mainly owned by Jews. At that time, Malta was the largest village in Rēzekne District.
In July 1941, a self-defense group was established in Malta under the leadership of guard Haralds Puntulis.
According to the testimony of local residents, already at the beginning of July, Puntulis and his scout team killed all the Jews of Silmala village in the Balda forest. Immediately after that, the killers stormed into Riebini, where Puntulis gave instructions to his subordinates: all Jews must be shot. After the shooting, a celebratory dinner was held in honor of the successful action – Jázeps Basankovičs, a participant in the tragedy, told about it.
After that, Puntulis and his assistant Drozdovski organized mass murders in Malta. After the initial order to shoot, wealthy Jews were not included in the list, so that they could first be deprived of all their possessions, jewelry and other valuables, and only then killed.
Maltese police officers took part in mass shootings in the Ančupani mountains, where they killed several thousand people, including all the inhabitants of Audriņi sajja.
The 50s and 60s of the 20th century were important in the growth of Malta. years, especially the period from 1950 to 1959, when Malta was the center of the district. During this time, intensive construction took place – the culture house was renovated (built in 1939 as the House of Guards), a dairy, an industrial complex, a hospital and a school were built. Until 1976, 332 individual houses were built in the village.
In the territory of the village there is one architectural monument of national importance and four of local importance.
Monuments of national importance:
The Roman Catholic Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross in Rosentow(Malta) is a wooden building with one tower. The church was built by the nobleman Antonijs Josef von Felkersam between 1780 and 1782. Soon the church turned out to be too small for the large congregation, which was separated as a separate church in 1801. In 1842, the church was extended for the first time, and in 1906, with the support of the owners of the Rozentova manor, the Bogomelets, it was extended again. Peculiar ferretrons (movable altars) have been preserved in the church.
Monuments of local importance:
The Bell Tower of the Catholic Church in Rozentova (Malta).
Prayer house of the Old Believers community of Malta (Borovka). The construction of the church started in 1931, it was built by the construction contractor A. Gruncevičs.
All Saints' Orthodox Church of Malta (Rozentova). It was built in 1928 as a small wooden log house near the Orthodox cemetery.
The Malta Horse Post Station, built in the middle of the 19th century, is the oldest building in Malta that has survived to this day. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Malta (until 1936 Borovaja) is a village in the eastern part of Latvia, in Latgale. The center of Malta Parish of Rēzekne Municipality is 21 km from Rēzekne.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Local government institutions in the village: Malta High School, Malta Music School, Malta Pre-School Educational Institution \"Dzīpariņš\", House of Culture, Malta Parish Library, Children and Youth Center, History Museum, Malta Municipalities Ltd. company, Center for Health and Social Care.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The special primary school of Rēzekne Municipality under the responsibility of Rēzekne municipality is located in Malta.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The origin of the name 'Malta' is not clearly documented – it may be related to the verb 'malt'.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The beginnings of Malta are connected with Rozentova manor, information about which can be found in the 16th century. After the change of some owners, at the time of the 1784 general survey, there were 23 villages and 76 homesteads in the manor. The peasants cultivated 200 tenths of land for the lord, the men also engaged in beekeeping, and the women in weaving.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The last owners of the manor, the Bogomolets family, founded a flax processing factory and a dairy there, which began with the request of the nobleman Filip Mihail Bogomolets on 17 October 1897, to the Vitebsk gubernatorial board for the installation of a milk heating and milk production plant with two steam boilers. The dairy got the patented name \"Rozentovo\" and produced dairy products, including cheeses of various varieties. The company received awards for quality in London, St. Petersburg, Warsaw, Daugavpils.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In 1836 the Petersburg–Warsaw highway was built through the territory of present-day Malta, and later, in 1861, the Petersburg-Warsaw railway line with the Antonopole railway station was opened. Moving from the nearby Rozentova manor towards the newly built railway station, a new settlement was formed – Borovaja, which, thanks to its advantageous location at the intersection of four roads and on the side of the railway, soon became the main trading point of the area.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "1873 the first folk school of Rozentova was founded in the parish house.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In 1933, Borovaja was granted the status of a densely populated place (village). 1937. In 1990, the village of Borovaja was renamed Malta (until then Malta was called the current Silmala) the settlement had 139 houses with 715 inhabitants and several dozen shops, which were mainly owned by Jews. At that time, Malta was the largest village in Rēzekne District.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In July 1941, a self-defense group was established in Malta under the leadership of guard Haralds Puntulis.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "According to the testimony of local residents, already at the beginning of July, Puntulis and his scout team killed all the Jews of Silmala village in the Balda forest. Immediately after that, the killers stormed into Riebini, where Puntulis gave instructions to his subordinates: all Jews must be shot. After the shooting, a celebratory dinner was held in honor of the successful action – Jázeps Basankovičs, a participant in the tragedy, told about it.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "After that, Puntulis and his assistant Drozdovski organized mass murders in Malta. After the initial order to shoot, wealthy Jews were not included in the list, so that they could first be deprived of all their possessions, jewelry and other valuables, and only then killed.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Maltese police officers took part in mass shootings in the Ančupani mountains, where they killed several thousand people, including all the inhabitants of Audriņi sajja.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "The 50s and 60s of the 20th century were important in the growth of Malta. years, especially the period from 1950 to 1959, when Malta was the center of the district. During this time, intensive construction took place – the culture house was renovated (built in 1939 as the House of Guards), a dairy, an industrial complex, a hospital and a school were built. Until 1976, 332 individual houses were built in the village.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "In the territory of the village there is one architectural monument of national importance and four of local importance.",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "Monuments of national importance:",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "The Roman Catholic Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross in Rosentow(Malta) is a wooden building with one tower. The church was built by the nobleman Antonijs Josef von Felkersam between 1780 and 1782. Soon the church turned out to be too small for the large congregation, which was separated as a separate church in 1801. In 1842, the church was extended for the first time, and in 1906, with the support of the owners of the Rozentova manor, the Bogomelets, it was extended again. Peculiar ferretrons (movable altars) have been preserved in the church.",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "Monuments of local importance:",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "The Bell Tower of the Catholic Church in Rozentova (Malta).",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "Prayer house of the Old Believers community of Malta (Borovka). The construction of the church started in 1931, it was built by the construction contractor A. Gruncevičs.",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "All Saints' Orthodox Church of Malta (Rozentova). It was built in 1928 as a small wooden log house near the Orthodox cemetery.",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "The Malta Horse Post Station, built in the middle of the 19th century, is the oldest building in Malta that has survived to this day.",
"title": "Cultural monuments"
}
] | Malta is a village in the eastern part of Latvia, in Latgale. The center of Malta Parish of Rēzekne Municipality is 21 km from Rēzekne. Local government institutions in the village: Malta High School, Malta Music School, Malta Pre-School Educational Institution "Dzīpariņš", House of Culture, Malta Parish Library, Children and Youth Center, History Museum, Malta Municipalities Ltd. company, Center for Health and Social Care. The special primary school of Rēzekne Municipality under the responsibility of Rēzekne municipality is located in Malta. | 2023-12-08T15:13:29Z | 2023-12-21T17:26:37Z | [
"Template:Infobox settlement",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Copyedit",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:More citations needed"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malta_(Malta_parish) |
75,516,393 | Nur Yasin | Nur Yasin (7 August 1954 – 6 December 2023) was an Indonesian politician.
Nur Yasin was born on 7 August 1954 in Jember Regency, Indonesia.
A member of the National Awakening Party, he served in the House of Representatives from 2009 to 2014 and again from 2018 until his death.
Yasin died on 6 December 2023, at the age of 69. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Nur Yasin (7 August 1954 – 6 December 2023) was an Indonesian politician.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Nur Yasin was born on 7 August 1954 in Jember Regency, Indonesia.",
"title": "Career and death"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "A member of the National Awakening Party, he served in the House of Representatives from 2009 to 2014 and again from 2018 until his death.",
"title": "Career and death"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Yasin died on 6 December 2023, at the age of 69.",
"title": "Career and death"
}
] | Nur Yasin was an Indonesian politician. | 2023-12-08T15:16:18Z | 2023-12-09T17:34:48Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nur_Yasin |
75,516,394 | Ushiwakamaru (restaurant) | Ushiwakamaru is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ushiwakamaru is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] | Ushiwakamaru is a Japanese restaurant in New York City. The restaurant has received a Michelin star. | 2023-12-08T15:16:20Z | 2023-12-16T23:40:30Z | [
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Chelsea, Manhattan",
"Template:Restaurants in Manhattan",
"Template:NYC-restaurant-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox restaurant"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ushiwakamaru_(restaurant) |
75,516,410 | Ferrera (surname) | [] | America Ferrera, American actress
Benigno Ferrera (1893–1988), Italian cross-country skier
Dennis Ferrera, Honduran footballer
Emilio Ferrera, Belgian footballer and manager
Francisco Ferrera (1794–1851), president of Honduras
Giuseppe Ferrera, Italian long-distance runner
Manu Ferrera, Spanish-born football coach
Mario Ferrera, Spanish male volleyball player
Miguel Ferrera, Honduran taekwondo practitioner
Yannick Ferrera, Belgian footballer and manager
Yesenia Ferrera, Cuban artistic gymnast | 2023-12-08T15:20:52Z | 2023-12-08T15:23:40Z | [
"Template:WIP"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrera_(surname) |
|
75,516,420 | Hippocles of Cyme | Hippocles of Cyme (in Greek: Ιπποκλής ο Κυμαίος) was an ancient Greek oecist from Cyme in Euboea.
As Strabo narrates, he, along with Megasthenes of Chalcis, undertook the task of creating a new colony. Both Hippocles and Megasthenes, after creating a small fleet and taking command of it, sailed around the Peloponnese and crossed the Ionian Sea. They reached Magna Graecia, and upon nearing its shores, they selected a site where they established the colony Cumae. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Hippocles of Cyme (in Greek: Ιπποκλής ο Κυμαίος) was an ancient Greek oecist from Cyme in Euboea.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "As Strabo narrates, he, along with Megasthenes of Chalcis, undertook the task of creating a new colony. Both Hippocles and Megasthenes, after creating a small fleet and taking command of it, sailed around the Peloponnese and crossed the Ionian Sea. They reached Magna Graecia, and upon nearing its shores, they selected a site where they established the colony Cumae.",
"title": ""
}
] | Hippocles of Cyme was an ancient Greek oecist from Cyme in Euboea. As Strabo narrates, he, along with Megasthenes of Chalcis, undertook the task of creating a new colony. Both Hippocles and Megasthenes, after creating a small fleet and taking command of it, sailed around the Peloponnese and crossed the Ionian Sea. They reached Magna Graecia, and upon nearing its shores, they selected a site where they established the colony Cumae. | 2023-12-08T15:22:19Z | 2023-12-08T23:14:29Z | [
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Translated page",
"Template:AncientGreece-bio-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippocles_of_Cyme |
75,516,431 | Onyx marble | Onyx marble may refer to: | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Onyx marble may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] | Onyx marble may refer to: Onyx Marble, a geologic formation in Arizona
Various rocks and minerals known as onyx marble | 2023-12-08T15:23:44Z | 2023-12-08T15:23:44Z | [
"Template:Wiktionary",
"Template:Disambiguation"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onyx_marble |
75,516,468 | Urgunge Onon | Urgunge Onon (Mongolian: ᠥᠷᠭᠦᠩᠭᠡᠨᠣᠨᠣᠨ, Өргөнгөө Онон, romanized: Örgöngge Onon January 1, 1920 – December 2015, also known as Peter Onon) was a Daur Mongol historian and Mongolist. He was a founding member of the Mongolian studies program at the University of Leeds and co-founder of the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU) at the University of Cambridge.
Urgunge was born in 1920 in a village in North-Eastern Inner Mongolia, close to the border with Manchuria. A member of the Onon clan of Daur Mongols, growing up he was interested in shamanistic beliefs and rituals still surviving amongst his people. Amidst the growing instability in the area due to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, his family were able to send him to a Japanese boarding school near Qiqihar, eventually becoming proficient in Japanese and being selected for university in Japan. He moved to Tokyo in 1941 to study political science at Toyo University, graduating in 1944. In Tokyo Urgunge became fascinated with the West, having had access to foreign films and newsreels for the first time.
Upon his return to Inner Mongolia he moved to Sonid Right Banner and worked for the Mongol Prince Demchugdongrub as a teacher and bodyguard. With the communist forces advancing he joined the Chinese local government and later became a Inner Mongolian delegate to the Nationalist government in Nanking. In Nanking he made contact with Owen Lattimore, who was to be a major influence in his life, and with his help obtained a one-year fellowship at Johns Hopkins University. Upon moving to the United States in November 1948 he was one of just a few Mongolian scholars resident there, including John Gombojab Hangin and Diluwa Khutugtu Jamsrangjab. Working for multiple agencies and organizations, due to the rise of McCarthyism and charges against Lattimore, Urgunge and others connected to Lattimore eventually lost their jobs.
In 1963 Lattimore was recruited by the University of Leeds to establish a Department of Chinese Studies (now East Asian Studies), and insisted on bringing Urgunge as a lecturer. In 1966 Urgunge first visited Mongolia and formed working relationships with senior academicians Shirendev, Damdinsuren, Natsagdorj as well as then-leader Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal, helping to nurture academic, business, and diplomatic ties between Mongolia and the UK. In 1968, together with Lattimore, they established a Mongolian Studies Programme at Leeds.
Urgunge retired from Leeds in 1985, but maintained his academic interests. In 1986, Urgunge and Caroline Humphrey jointly founded the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU) at the University of Cambridge, where he became general manager, as well as life member at Clare Hall, Cambridge. In addition, he was awarded the title of Honorary Professor at the National University of Mongolia, and served as a Visiting Professor at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
He was the first Mongolian to translate the Secret History of the Mongols into English in 1990 (republished in 2001).
Urgunge was married to Narangerel and had four children: Solongowa, Oyongowa, Temujin, and Toli. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Urgunge Onon (Mongolian: ᠥᠷᠭᠦᠩᠭᠡᠨᠣᠨᠣᠨ, Өргөнгөө Онон, romanized: Örgöngge Onon January 1, 1920 – December 2015, also known as Peter Onon) was a Daur Mongol historian and Mongolist. He was a founding member of the Mongolian studies program at the University of Leeds and co-founder of the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU) at the University of Cambridge.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Urgunge was born in 1920 in a village in North-Eastern Inner Mongolia, close to the border with Manchuria. A member of the Onon clan of Daur Mongols, growing up he was interested in shamanistic beliefs and rituals still surviving amongst his people. Amidst the growing instability in the area due to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, his family were able to send him to a Japanese boarding school near Qiqihar, eventually becoming proficient in Japanese and being selected for university in Japan. He moved to Tokyo in 1941 to study political science at Toyo University, graduating in 1944. In Tokyo Urgunge became fascinated with the West, having had access to foreign films and newsreels for the first time.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Upon his return to Inner Mongolia he moved to Sonid Right Banner and worked for the Mongol Prince Demchugdongrub as a teacher and bodyguard. With the communist forces advancing he joined the Chinese local government and later became a Inner Mongolian delegate to the Nationalist government in Nanking. In Nanking he made contact with Owen Lattimore, who was to be a major influence in his life, and with his help obtained a one-year fellowship at Johns Hopkins University. Upon moving to the United States in November 1948 he was one of just a few Mongolian scholars resident there, including John Gombojab Hangin and Diluwa Khutugtu Jamsrangjab. Working for multiple agencies and organizations, due to the rise of McCarthyism and charges against Lattimore, Urgunge and others connected to Lattimore eventually lost their jobs.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1963 Lattimore was recruited by the University of Leeds to establish a Department of Chinese Studies (now East Asian Studies), and insisted on bringing Urgunge as a lecturer. In 1966 Urgunge first visited Mongolia and formed working relationships with senior academicians Shirendev, Damdinsuren, Natsagdorj as well as then-leader Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal, helping to nurture academic, business, and diplomatic ties between Mongolia and the UK. In 1968, together with Lattimore, they established a Mongolian Studies Programme at Leeds.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Urgunge retired from Leeds in 1985, but maintained his academic interests. In 1986, Urgunge and Caroline Humphrey jointly founded the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU) at the University of Cambridge, where he became general manager, as well as life member at Clare Hall, Cambridge. In addition, he was awarded the title of Honorary Professor at the National University of Mongolia, and served as a Visiting Professor at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "He was the first Mongolian to translate the Secret History of the Mongols into English in 1990 (republished in 2001).",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Urgunge was married to Narangerel and had four children: Solongowa, Oyongowa, Temujin, and Toli.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Urgunge Onon was a Daur Mongol historian and Mongolist. He was a founding member of the Mongolian studies program at the University of Leeds and co-founder of the Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit (MIASU) at the University of Cambridge. | 2023-12-08T15:30:48Z | 2023-12-28T08:53:02Z | [
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Lang-mn",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urgunge_Onon |
75,516,469 | Amelia Tucker | Amelia Audrey Moore Tucker (1902 – February 9, 1987) was an American politician and minister from the U.S. state of Kentucky. She was the first African-American woman elected to the Kentucky General Assembly, serving in the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1961 to 1963.
Tucker was born in Alabama in 1902 and attended Alabama State Teachers College and the University of Louisville. She moved to Louisville, Kentucky, with her husband, Charles Ewbank Tucker, in the 1920s. During the 1930s, her husband ran twice unsuccessfully on the Democratic ticket for the Kentucky House of Representatives. She was a minister at the Brown Temple AMEZ Church, where her husband was bishop.
Tucker was elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1961 as a Republican, defeating a Black Democratic candidate to become the first Black woman to serve in the Kentucky General Assembly and the first to serve as a Southern state legislator since Reconstruction. She served one term. She fought to bar businesses from engaging in racial discrimination and enacted a law permitting municipalities to enact their own civil rights laws. She served on President Richard Nixon's advisory council on ethnic groups during the early 1970s. She also served on the Jefferson County Republican executive committee during the 1960s and 1970s.
After her husband's death in 1975, Tucker moved to Los Angeles, where she died on February 9, 1987, and was interred at Eastern Cemetery. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Amelia Audrey Moore Tucker (1902 – February 9, 1987) was an American politician and minister from the U.S. state of Kentucky. She was the first African-American woman elected to the Kentucky General Assembly, serving in the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1961 to 1963.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Tucker was born in Alabama in 1902 and attended Alabama State Teachers College and the University of Louisville. She moved to Louisville, Kentucky, with her husband, Charles Ewbank Tucker, in the 1920s. During the 1930s, her husband ran twice unsuccessfully on the Democratic ticket for the Kentucky House of Representatives. She was a minister at the Brown Temple AMEZ Church, where her husband was bishop.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Tucker was elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1961 as a Republican, defeating a Black Democratic candidate to become the first Black woman to serve in the Kentucky General Assembly and the first to serve as a Southern state legislator since Reconstruction. She served one term. She fought to bar businesses from engaging in racial discrimination and enacted a law permitting municipalities to enact their own civil rights laws. She served on President Richard Nixon's advisory council on ethnic groups during the early 1970s. She also served on the Jefferson County Republican executive committee during the 1960s and 1970s.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "After her husband's death in 1975, Tucker moved to Los Angeles, where she died on February 9, 1987, and was interred at Eastern Cemetery.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] | Amelia Audrey Moore Tucker was an American politician and minister from the U.S. state of Kentucky. She was the first African-American woman elected to the Kentucky General Assembly, serving in the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1961 to 1963. | 2023-12-08T15:30:53Z | 2023-12-12T13:09:17Z | [
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_Tucker |
75,516,475 | Kaygıntaş, Varto | Kaygıntaş is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey.
Kaygıntaş and the plateau used for animal husbandry are located on the Şerafettin Mountains.
There is a secondary school in the village. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kaygıntaş is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Kaygıntaş and the plateau used for animal husbandry are located on the Şerafettin Mountains.",
"title": "Geology and geography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "There is a secondary school in the village.",
"title": "Education"
}
] | Kaygıntaş is a village in the Varto District of the Muş Province in east Turkey. | 2023-12-08T15:32:05Z | 2023-12-08T15:32:05Z | [
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox Turkey place",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:EAnatolia-geo-stub"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayg%C4%B1nta%C5%9F,_Varto |
75,516,479 | Constantin Stavropoulos | Constantin Stavropoulos was the former Undersecretary General of the United Nations Office of Legal Affairs of the United Nations.
Stavropoulos was born in 1905 in Athens, Greece. He was educated at the University of Athens and the London School of Economics. After the completion of his law degree, Stavropoulos held a series of jobs in private legal practice and government, beginning a career with the Greek foreign ministry in 1941.
After the war, began his career with the United Nations, which he would go on to serve for over 30 years. He acted as special legal adviser to Count Folke Bernadotte, the mediator for Palestine, and later to the acting mediator, Ralph Bunche. As a UN staff member, Stavropoulos had been extensively involved with issue of Palestine since 1947. He was a member of a five member team sent by the UN Secretariat to Palestine in 1947 to study the country as soon as the British government announced that it would be referring the Palestine problem to the United Nations. The team produced a vast amount of documentation which was to serve as background material for the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine. Later on, Stavropoulos would be recruited by Ralph Bunche, after he had been named Principal Secretary of the United Nations Palestine Commission (UNPC). Although the Commission was disbanded on 14 May 1948 when the General Assembly decided to instead appoint a mediator to try to bring peace to the country, Stavropoulos was again recruited by Bunche in order to support UN Mediator Folke Bernadotte with his task.
Stavropoulos would go on to become Principal Director in Charge of the Legal Department of the United Nations Secretariat from 1952-1954. In 1954, Stavropoulos became Under-Secretary General of the Office of Legal Affairs when the Legal Department of the UN was reorganized by the then Secretary General, Dag Hammerskjöld.
Stavropoulos served as the Special Representative of the Secretary General at the two first United Nations Conferences on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) in 1958 and 1960 respectively. UNCLOS I resulted in four treaties being concluded in 1958: Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone, entry into force: 10 September 1964 Convention on the Continental Shelf, entry into force: 10 June 1964 Convention on the High Seas, entry into force: 30 September 1962 Convention on Fishing and Conservation of Living Resources of the High Seas, entry into force: 20 March 1966.
One year after the UN General Assembly decided, in 1966, to adopt a resolution terminating South Africa's mandate over Namibia, the General Assembly decided to set up a UN Council for Namibia and appoint a High Commissioner for Namibia. On the proposal of the Secretary-General, the United Nations General Assembly appointed Constantin Stavropoulos, Legal Counsel of the United Nations as Acting United Nations High Commissioner for South West Africa at a plenary meeting on 13 June 1967. During his term, he achieved the issuance of travel documents for Namibians, which allowed them to travel to countries recognising those documents.
Stavropoulos authored the journal article "The Practice of Voluntary Abstentions by Permanent Members of the Security Council under Article 27, Paragraph 3, of the Charter of the United Nations" in 1967 which was published in the American Journal of International Law.
Stavropoulos died in 1979 in Athens, Greece, as a result of a heart attack after a long illness. He was 79 years old and was survived by his wife Giannina Colquhoun. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Constantin Stavropoulos was the former Undersecretary General of the United Nations Office of Legal Affairs of the United Nations.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Stavropoulos was born in 1905 in Athens, Greece. He was educated at the University of Athens and the London School of Economics. After the completion of his law degree, Stavropoulos held a series of jobs in private legal practice and government, beginning a career with the Greek foreign ministry in 1941.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "After the war, began his career with the United Nations, which he would go on to serve for over 30 years. He acted as special legal adviser to Count Folke Bernadotte, the mediator for Palestine, and later to the acting mediator, Ralph Bunche. As a UN staff member, Stavropoulos had been extensively involved with issue of Palestine since 1947. He was a member of a five member team sent by the UN Secretariat to Palestine in 1947 to study the country as soon as the British government announced that it would be referring the Palestine problem to the United Nations. The team produced a vast amount of documentation which was to serve as background material for the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine. Later on, Stavropoulos would be recruited by Ralph Bunche, after he had been named Principal Secretary of the United Nations Palestine Commission (UNPC). Although the Commission was disbanded on 14 May 1948 when the General Assembly decided to instead appoint a mediator to try to bring peace to the country, Stavropoulos was again recruited by Bunche in order to support UN Mediator Folke Bernadotte with his task.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Stavropoulos would go on to become Principal Director in Charge of the Legal Department of the United Nations Secretariat from 1952-1954. In 1954, Stavropoulos became Under-Secretary General of the Office of Legal Affairs when the Legal Department of the UN was reorganized by the then Secretary General, Dag Hammerskjöld.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Stavropoulos served as the Special Representative of the Secretary General at the two first United Nations Conferences on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) in 1958 and 1960 respectively. UNCLOS I resulted in four treaties being concluded in 1958: Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone, entry into force: 10 September 1964 Convention on the Continental Shelf, entry into force: 10 June 1964 Convention on the High Seas, entry into force: 30 September 1962 Convention on Fishing and Conservation of Living Resources of the High Seas, entry into force: 20 March 1966.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "One year after the UN General Assembly decided, in 1966, to adopt a resolution terminating South Africa's mandate over Namibia, the General Assembly decided to set up a UN Council for Namibia and appoint a High Commissioner for Namibia. On the proposal of the Secretary-General, the United Nations General Assembly appointed Constantin Stavropoulos, Legal Counsel of the United Nations as Acting United Nations High Commissioner for South West Africa at a plenary meeting on 13 June 1967. During his term, he achieved the issuance of travel documents for Namibians, which allowed them to travel to countries recognising those documents.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Stavropoulos authored the journal article \"The Practice of Voluntary Abstentions by Permanent Members of the Security Council under Article 27, Paragraph 3, of the Charter of the United Nations\" in 1967 which was published in the American Journal of International Law.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Stavropoulos died in 1979 in Athens, Greece, as a result of a heart attack after a long illness. He was 79 years old and was survived by his wife Giannina Colquhoun.",
"title": "Death"
}
] | Constantin Stavropoulos was the former Undersecretary General of the United Nations Office of Legal Affairs of the United Nations. | 2023-12-08T15:32:47Z | 2023-12-24T04:14:25Z | [
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Plagiarized",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantin_Stavropoulos |
75,516,486 | Sheikh Mohammad Salim Ullah | Sheikh Mohammad Salim Ullah is a Bangladesh civil servant and secretary of the Ministry of Finance. He is in-charge oof the Financial Institutions Division at the Ministry of Finance. He served under Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal.
Ullah was born in Feni District. He did his undergraduate and graduate studies in finance at the University of Dhaka.
Ullah joined the Bangladesh Civil Service in 1991 as an assistant commissioner. He worked as the assistant commissioner of land and Upazila Nirbahi Officer.
In August 2021, Ullah was promoted to secretary and appointed head of the Financial Institutions Division. He was serving as the additional secretary of the Finance Division of the Ministry of Finance. He replaced Senior Secretary Ashadul Islam as the head of the Financial Institutions Division. He is the deputy chairman of UAE-Bangladesh Investment Company Limited. He is a director of Bangladesh Bank. He was part of the Bangladeshi delegation that meet Antoinette Sayeh, Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, in Dhaka.
Ullah has called on bankers to take actions on money laundering. He is a director of the Microcredit Regulatory Authority. He called on microfinance institutions to provide more loans to low income individuals. During his time a schism developed between the Ministry of Finance and Bangladesh Bank over control. Bangladesh Bank was being treated like a department of the ministry and its officials were being appointed by the ministry limiting the freedom of the central bank. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sheikh Mohammad Salim Ullah is a Bangladesh civil servant and secretary of the Ministry of Finance. He is in-charge oof the Financial Institutions Division at the Ministry of Finance. He served under Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Ullah was born in Feni District. He did his undergraduate and graduate studies in finance at the University of Dhaka.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Ullah joined the Bangladesh Civil Service in 1991 as an assistant commissioner. He worked as the assistant commissioner of land and Upazila Nirbahi Officer.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In August 2021, Ullah was promoted to secretary and appointed head of the Financial Institutions Division. He was serving as the additional secretary of the Finance Division of the Ministry of Finance. He replaced Senior Secretary Ashadul Islam as the head of the Financial Institutions Division. He is the deputy chairman of UAE-Bangladesh Investment Company Limited. He is a director of Bangladesh Bank. He was part of the Bangladeshi delegation that meet Antoinette Sayeh, Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, in Dhaka.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Ullah has called on bankers to take actions on money laundering. He is a director of the Microcredit Regulatory Authority. He called on microfinance institutions to provide more loans to low income individuals. During his time a schism developed between the Ministry of Finance and Bangladesh Bank over control. Bangladesh Bank was being treated like a department of the ministry and its officials were being appointed by the ministry limiting the freedom of the central bank.",
"title": "Career"
}
] | Sheikh Mohammad Salim Ullah is a Bangladesh civil servant and secretary of the Ministry of Finance. He is in-charge oof the Financial Institutions Division at the Ministry of Finance. He served under Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal. | 2023-12-08T15:33:46Z | 2023-12-29T15:20:21Z | [
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Reflist"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheikh_Mohammad_Salim_Ullah |
75,516,528 | Arvydas Šliogeris | Arvydas Šliogeris (Lithuanian pronunciation: [arˈvʲidɑs ˈʃljɔɡɛrɪs]; 12 September 1944 – 18 December 2019) was a Lithuanian philosopher, researcher of German existentialism, translator of philosophical texts, and essayist.
Arvydas Šliogeris was born and raised in a family of teachers. His father taught Latin and German languages, while his mother taught drawing and geography. The family lived in a countryside estate on the outskirts of the city, where they had a small farm and raised animals.
He graduated with a gold medal from Panevėžys 2nd High School. From 1962 to 1967, he studied at the Faculty of Chemical Technology at Kaunas University of Technology.
In 1970, he began working at the Faculty of Philosophy at Vilnius University, where he taught philosophy from 1973 to 2012 and became an associate professor in 1979. In 1987, he earned a doctoral degree in philosophy. In 1990, he was one of the founders of the Lithuanian Liberal Union. From 2003 to 2012, he served as the head of the Faculty of Philosophy at Vilnius University, and since 2012, he has been a professor emeritus. From 2007, he was a full member of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in the field of philosophy.
Arvydas Šliogeris was one of the most productive Lithuanian philosophers. During the years of the rebirth, he actively engaged in publicism and became known for his sharp, vivid, and often controversial statements. This philosopher was characterized by an evaluation of hierarchical social structures and criticism of egalitarianism (ideas of human equality). He spoke against the referendum process, as it did not correspond to his views, since voting was not dependent on a person's social status.
Arvydas Šliogeris' thinking is characterized by the power of philosophical insight, contemplation of the fundamental foundations of philosophy, paradoxicality, virtuoso linguistic expression, originality, respect for tradition, the creative inclusion of ideas from great Western thinkers into his own field of philosophy, the preservation of individuality, and the connection of everyday experience reflection with contemplation of fundamental Western philosophical texts. The main themes of his philosophy include being and nothingness, sensuality and supersensuality, seeing and thinking, the inhuman world as a place of immanent transcendence phenomena, the nature of the language phenomenon, the relationship between sensually experienced objects and verbally created supersensory sphere, love of a specific place or location (philotopia), the fate of Western philosophy and culture, and the condition of modern Western society. He made significant contributions to the creation of modern philosophical terminology in Lithuanian and the education of Lithuanian philosophers, actively advocating for the status of Lithuanian and the Lithuanian language in society.
Arvydas Šliogeris translated works by Karl Popper, Martin Heidegger, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hannah Arendt, Albert Camus, and Karl Marx. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Arvydas Šliogeris (Lithuanian pronunciation: [arˈvʲidɑs ˈʃljɔɡɛrɪs]; 12 September 1944 – 18 December 2019) was a Lithuanian philosopher, researcher of German existentialism, translator of philosophical texts, and essayist.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Arvydas Šliogeris was born and raised in a family of teachers. His father taught Latin and German languages, while his mother taught drawing and geography. The family lived in a countryside estate on the outskirts of the city, where they had a small farm and raised animals.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "He graduated with a gold medal from Panevėžys 2nd High School. From 1962 to 1967, he studied at the Faculty of Chemical Technology at Kaunas University of Technology.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1970, he began working at the Faculty of Philosophy at Vilnius University, where he taught philosophy from 1973 to 2012 and became an associate professor in 1979. In 1987, he earned a doctoral degree in philosophy. In 1990, he was one of the founders of the Lithuanian Liberal Union. From 2003 to 2012, he served as the head of the Faculty of Philosophy at Vilnius University, and since 2012, he has been a professor emeritus. From 2007, he was a full member of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in the field of philosophy.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Arvydas Šliogeris was one of the most productive Lithuanian philosophers. During the years of the rebirth, he actively engaged in publicism and became known for his sharp, vivid, and often controversial statements. This philosopher was characterized by an evaluation of hierarchical social structures and criticism of egalitarianism (ideas of human equality). He spoke against the referendum process, as it did not correspond to his views, since voting was not dependent on a person's social status.",
"title": "Philosophy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Arvydas Šliogeris' thinking is characterized by the power of philosophical insight, contemplation of the fundamental foundations of philosophy, paradoxicality, virtuoso linguistic expression, originality, respect for tradition, the creative inclusion of ideas from great Western thinkers into his own field of philosophy, the preservation of individuality, and the connection of everyday experience reflection with contemplation of fundamental Western philosophical texts. The main themes of his philosophy include being and nothingness, sensuality and supersensuality, seeing and thinking, the inhuman world as a place of immanent transcendence phenomena, the nature of the language phenomenon, the relationship between sensually experienced objects and verbally created supersensory sphere, love of a specific place or location (philotopia), the fate of Western philosophy and culture, and the condition of modern Western society. He made significant contributions to the creation of modern philosophical terminology in Lithuanian and the education of Lithuanian philosophers, actively advocating for the status of Lithuanian and the Lithuanian language in society.",
"title": "Philosophy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Arvydas Šliogeris translated works by Karl Popper, Martin Heidegger, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hannah Arendt, Albert Camus, and Karl Marx.",
"title": "Philosophy"
}
] | Arvydas Šliogeris was a Lithuanian philosopher, researcher of German existentialism, translator of philosophical texts, and essayist. | 2023-12-08T15:43:56Z | 2023-12-25T22:35:54Z | [
"Template:Infobox philosopher",
"Template:IPA-lt",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Webarchive"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arvydas_%C5%A0liogeris |
75,516,529 | Uzbek clothing | Uzbek clothing consists of the traditional style of clothing worn by Uzbeks. It showcases the traditional fashion sensibilities of Uzbek cultural traditions and forms one of the major cultural facets of Uzbek civilization. There are two broad types of clothing worn by Uzbeks: traditional clothing known as traditional Uzbek clothing (Uzbek: oʻzbek milliy liboslari) and Western clothing, which encompasses all else not recognized as either national dress or the dress of another country.
Traditional clothing for men include various forms of headgear, most commonly a skullcap known as doʻppi, a long coat called chopon, a shirt known as yaktak, a traditional sash, and loose pants. Women usually wear clothing that covers the whole body, with bright-colored knee-length dresses with loose pants known as lozim being the most common attire. On special occasions, men wear richly embroidered chopons (called zarchopon in some regions), while women wear elaborate dresses made of satin and silk that are often richly embroidered with golden thread known as zardozi.
Previous generations of Uzbeks nearly entirely wore traditional clothing. Following the Russian conquest of Central Asia, Western clothing and fashion became increasingly popular, especially among younger and more educated generations. While Uzbek clothing in the Soviet era typically focused primarily on utilitarian value and was largely uninfluenced by international fashion trends, in more recent times more emphasis has been put on traditional patterns. Still, it is now rare for someone to wear traditional clothing as everyday clothes, especially in cities, but doʻppis, chopons, and women's knee-length dresses remain popular, particularly in rural areas.
The doʻppi is a common style of Uzbek headgear. Uzbek doʻppis are typically square with pointed edges, but styles vary widely by region. While originally just worn by men, many women also wear doʻppis. Other common traditional headgear worn by Uzbek men include the chugurma, kalpak, karakul, and lately the Islamic taqiyah.
Although the Soviet government ran a widespread anti-veiling campaign starting in the 1920s, there was considerably less attention given to men's headwear. Some ethnic Uzbek Communist Party leaders and activists wore the traditional turban, while others wore only Western-style suits. Some Jadids supported adoption of such style suits as a symbol of progress, while others considered it a form of Russification.
Uzbek men's clothing has changed considerably over time. Historically, traditional outfits consisted of a striped chapan and turban. Over time clothing styles have changed, as trousers with shirts became more popular. The doʻppi, most commonly a quilted black cap with white embroidery, has largely replaced the turban. Modern Uzbek men usually wear Western-style shits and trousers.
Historically Uzbek women wore a paranja outside the home, which covered the entire body, complete with a mesh chachvon usually made of woven horsehair covering the face, although it stopped being worn in Uzbekistan in the late 1930s due to the hujum. While Uzbek women in Uzbekistan no longer wear the paranja, paranjas are sometimes draped during funerals. Uzbek women in Afghanistan still typically wear a burqa when leaving the home.
In modern times, Uzbek women often wear bright-colored knee-length dresses with loose pants known as ishton or lozim underneath. Some Uzbek women have started wearing the hijab and dresses with long sleeves, but the practice is not widespread.
Uzbekistan is one of the world's largest producers of cotton and silk by volume, although cotton production has been declining over time. For centuries, the land of Uzbekistan was an integral part of the Silk Road with trading hubs in Bukhara and Samarkand. The city of Samarkand became a destination for silk producers throughout the area, resulting in the transmission of various patterns and styles of weaving. | [
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Uzbek clothing consists of the traditional style of clothing worn by Uzbeks. It showcases the traditional fashion sensibilities of Uzbek cultural traditions and forms one of the major cultural facets of Uzbek civilization. There are two broad types of clothing worn by Uzbeks: traditional clothing known as traditional Uzbek clothing (Uzbek: oʻzbek milliy liboslari) and Western clothing, which encompasses all else not recognized as either national dress or the dress of another country.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Traditional clothing for men include various forms of headgear, most commonly a skullcap known as doʻppi, a long coat called chopon, a shirt known as yaktak, a traditional sash, and loose pants. Women usually wear clothing that covers the whole body, with bright-colored knee-length dresses with loose pants known as lozim being the most common attire. On special occasions, men wear richly embroidered chopons (called zarchopon in some regions), while women wear elaborate dresses made of satin and silk that are often richly embroidered with golden thread known as zardozi.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Previous generations of Uzbeks nearly entirely wore traditional clothing. Following the Russian conquest of Central Asia, Western clothing and fashion became increasingly popular, especially among younger and more educated generations. While Uzbek clothing in the Soviet era typically focused primarily on utilitarian value and was largely uninfluenced by international fashion trends, in more recent times more emphasis has been put on traditional patterns. Still, it is now rare for someone to wear traditional clothing as everyday clothes, especially in cities, but doʻppis, chopons, and women's knee-length dresses remain popular, particularly in rural areas.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The doʻppi is a common style of Uzbek headgear. Uzbek doʻppis are typically square with pointed edges, but styles vary widely by region. While originally just worn by men, many women also wear doʻppis. Other common traditional headgear worn by Uzbek men include the chugurma, kalpak, karakul, and lately the Islamic taqiyah.",
"title": "Headgear"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Although the Soviet government ran a widespread anti-veiling campaign starting in the 1920s, there was considerably less attention given to men's headwear. Some ethnic Uzbek Communist Party leaders and activists wore the traditional turban, while others wore only Western-style suits. Some Jadids supported adoption of such style suits as a symbol of progress, while others considered it a form of Russification.",
"title": "Headgear"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Uzbek men's clothing has changed considerably over time. Historically, traditional outfits consisted of a striped chapan and turban. Over time clothing styles have changed, as trousers with shirts became more popular. The doʻppi, most commonly a quilted black cap with white embroidery, has largely replaced the turban. Modern Uzbek men usually wear Western-style shits and trousers.",
"title": "Men's clothing"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Historically Uzbek women wore a paranja outside the home, which covered the entire body, complete with a mesh chachvon usually made of woven horsehair covering the face, although it stopped being worn in Uzbekistan in the late 1930s due to the hujum. While Uzbek women in Uzbekistan no longer wear the paranja, paranjas are sometimes draped during funerals. Uzbek women in Afghanistan still typically wear a burqa when leaving the home.",
"title": "Women's clothing"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In modern times, Uzbek women often wear bright-colored knee-length dresses with loose pants known as ishton or lozim underneath. Some Uzbek women have started wearing the hijab and dresses with long sleeves, but the practice is not widespread.",
"title": "Women's clothing"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Uzbekistan is one of the world's largest producers of cotton and silk by volume, although cotton production has been declining over time. For centuries, the land of Uzbekistan was an integral part of the Silk Road with trading hubs in Bukhara and Samarkand. The city of Samarkand became a destination for silk producers throughout the area, resulting in the transmission of various patterns and styles of weaving.",
"title": "Materials and production methods"
}
] | Uzbek clothing consists of the traditional style of clothing worn by Uzbeks. It showcases the traditional fashion sensibilities of Uzbek cultural traditions and forms one of the major cultural facets of Uzbek civilization. There are two broad types of clothing worn by Uzbeks: traditional clothing known as traditional Uzbek clothing and Western clothing, which encompasses all else not recognized as either national dress or the dress of another country. Traditional clothing for men include various forms of headgear, most commonly a skullcap known as doʻppi, a long coat called chopon, a shirt known as yaktak, a traditional sash, and loose pants. Women usually wear clothing that covers the whole body, with bright-colored knee-length dresses with loose pants known as lozim being the most common attire. On special occasions, men wear richly embroidered chopons, while women wear elaborate dresses made of satin and silk that are often richly embroidered with golden thread known as zardozi. Previous generations of Uzbeks nearly entirely wore traditional clothing. Following the Russian conquest of Central Asia, Western clothing and fashion became increasingly popular, especially among younger and more educated generations. While Uzbek clothing in the Soviet era typically focused primarily on utilitarian value and was largely uninfluenced by international fashion trends, in more recent times more emphasis has been put on traditional patterns. Still, it is now rare for someone to wear traditional clothing as everyday clothes, especially in cities, but doʻppis, chopons, and women's knee-length dresses remain popular, particularly in rural areas. | 2023-12-08T15:43:59Z | 2023-12-13T19:44:35Z | [
"Template:Refend",
"Template:Uzbek clothing",
"Template:Lang-uz",
"Template:Sfn",
"Template:See also",
"Template:Image frame",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Refbegin",
"Template:Commonscat",
"Template:Uzbekistan topics",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Clear",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite journal"
] | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbek_clothing |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.