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75,563,345
Mosque of Abu Ubaidah Amer ibn al-Jarrah
The Mosque of Abu Ubaidah Amer ibn al-Jarrah (Arabic: مسجد أبي عبيدة عامر بن الجراح) is a historic mosque and mausoleum located in the town of Deir Alla, Jordan. It contains the purported tomb of Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah, one of the Sahabah and a military commander of the Rashidun Caliphate. Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah died in the year 639, various sources reported his burial in the territory of what is now present-day Jordan. In the 13th century, a domed mausoleum and an attached mosque were erected over the purported grave of Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah by the Mamluk ruler, Baybars. During the rule of the Hashemite Kingdom, in the years 1946 until 1954, the mosque and its adjoining mausoleum were entirely rebuilt into a larger structure, at the request of the Ministry of Jordan. The current structure is modern, but there are inscriptions from the Mamluk period still preserved in the mosque. The mosque is well-known for containing the tomb of the famed military commander it is named after. Other than the aforementioned, there is also a library and an Islamic museum. Residences are present for the Imam of the mosque and the muezzin. A multi-purpose hall and an area for the VIP guests is also included in the complex. There is a large cemetery outside the mosque complex, which currently suffers from overcrowding, due to people wishing to be buried next to a revered figure in their religion.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Mosque of Abu Ubaidah Amer ibn al-Jarrah (Arabic: مسجد أبي عبيدة عامر بن الجراح) is a historic mosque and mausoleum located in the town of Deir Alla, Jordan. It contains the purported tomb of Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah, one of the Sahabah and a military commander of the Rashidun Caliphate.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah died in the year 639, various sources reported his burial in the territory of what is now present-day Jordan. In the 13th century, a domed mausoleum and an attached mosque were erected over the purported grave of Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah by the Mamluk ruler, Baybars. During the rule of the Hashemite Kingdom, in the years 1946 until 1954, the mosque and its adjoining mausoleum were entirely rebuilt into a larger structure, at the request of the Ministry of Jordan. The current structure is modern, but there are inscriptions from the Mamluk period still preserved in the mosque.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The mosque is well-known for containing the tomb of the famed military commander it is named after.", "title": "Features of the mosque" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Other than the aforementioned, there is also a library and an Islamic museum. Residences are present for the Imam of the mosque and the muezzin. A multi-purpose hall and an area for the VIP guests is also included in the complex. There is a large cemetery outside the mosque complex, which currently suffers from overcrowding, due to people wishing to be buried next to a revered figure in their religion.", "title": "Features of the mosque" } ]
The Mosque of Abu Ubaidah Amer ibn al-Jarrah is a historic mosque and mausoleum located in the town of Deir Alla, Jordan. It contains the purported tomb of Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah, one of the Sahabah and a military commander of the Rashidun Caliphate.
2023-12-14T13:59:57Z
2023-12-15T10:40:52Z
[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Infobox religious building", "Template:Lang-ar" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque_of_Abu_Ubaidah_Amer_ibn_al-Jarrah
75,563,351
Vicky Love (album)
Vicky Love is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 16 March 2007 on his label Iris and distributed by Universal Music Group. Note: "Fotografia" is a hidden track.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vicky Love is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 16 March 2007 on his label Iris and distributed by Universal Music Group.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Note: \"Fotografia\" is a hidden track.", "title": "Track listing" } ]
Vicky Love is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 16 March 2007 on his label Iris and distributed by Universal Music Group.
2023-12-14T14:01:02Z
2023-12-30T01:30:53Z
[ "Template:Authority control", "Template:2000s-album-stub", "Template:Infobox album", "Template:Track listing", "Template:Album chart", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Biagio Antonacci" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicky_Love_(album)
75,563,355
Abu Zaabal Specialized Industries
The Abu Zaabal Specialized Industries Company or Military Factory 300 is an Egyptian government joint-stock company, one of the companies of the National Authority for Military Production affiliated with the Ministry of Military Production, established by Resolution of the Minister of Military Production No. 37 of 2016, located in the Abu Zaabal area in Qalyubia Governorate, on an area of 371 acres, works in the field of producing small and medium weapons and ammunition of various types. Small arms Ammunition and protactical materials
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Abu Zaabal Specialized Industries Company or Military Factory 300 is an Egyptian government joint-stock company, one of the companies of the National Authority for Military Production affiliated with the Ministry of Military Production, established by Resolution of the Minister of Military Production No. 37 of 2016, located in the Abu Zaabal area in Qalyubia Governorate, on an area of 371 acres, works in the field of producing small and medium weapons and ammunition of various types.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Small arms", "title": "Products" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Ammunition and protactical materials", "title": "Products" } ]
The Abu Zaabal Specialized Industries Company or Military Factory 300 is an Egyptian government joint-stock company, one of the companies of the National Authority for Military Production affiliated with the Ministry of Military Production, established by Resolution of the Minister of Military Production No. 37 of 2016, located in the Abu Zaabal area in Qalyubia Governorate, on an area of 371 acres, works in the field of producing small and medium weapons and ammunition of various types.
2023-12-14T14:01:25Z
2023-12-18T16:25:11Z
[ "Template:Infobox company", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Zaabal_Specialized_Industries
75,563,357
Cadet College Mithi
Cadet College Mithi is a military preparatory institution located in Mithi, Sindh, Pakistan. Established in 2012 and approved by then-President Asif Ali Zardari, the college aims to provide a rigorous academic and military training program to prepare cadets for leadership roles in the Pakistani Armed Forces and other professions.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Cadet College Mithi is a military preparatory institution located in Mithi, Sindh, Pakistan. Established in 2012 and approved by then-President Asif Ali Zardari, the college aims to provide a rigorous academic and military training program to prepare cadets for leadership roles in the Pakistani Armed Forces and other professions.", "title": "" } ]
Cadet College Mithi is a military preparatory institution located in Mithi, Sindh, Pakistan. Established in 2012 and approved by then-President Asif Ali Zardari, the college aims to provide a rigorous academic and military training program to prepare cadets for leadership roles in the Pakistani Armed Forces and other professions.
2023-12-14T14:01:34Z
2023-12-31T05:10:47Z
[ "Template:Infobox school", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadet_College_Mithi
75,563,374
Ludmila Vinogradoff
Ludmila Vinogradoff Sorokin is a Chinese-born Venezuelan journalist. She has worked in several national and international media outlets, including El Nacional, El País, Semana, ABC and Clarín. Born to a Chinese father and a Russian mother, Ludmila emigrated with her family to Venezuela in search of freedom. She graduated from the Central University of Venezuela and later obtained a postgraduate degree in cinema and mass communication at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris, France. She began her journalistic career at the Venezuelan newspaper El Nacional, covering political and economic topics. Vinogradoff has worked as a journalist for more than 25 years and part of her career has included investigating corruption in Venezuela. She has also been international correspondent in Caracas for the Spanish newspaper El País and the Colombian magazine Semana. She currently works for the Spanish newspaper ABC and the Argentine outlet Clarín.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Ludmila Vinogradoff Sorokin is a Chinese-born Venezuelan journalist. She has worked in several national and international media outlets, including El Nacional, El País, Semana, ABC and Clarín.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Born to a Chinese father and a Russian mother, Ludmila emigrated with her family to Venezuela in search of freedom. She graduated from the Central University of Venezuela and later obtained a postgraduate degree in cinema and mass communication at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris, France.", "title": "Education" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "She began her journalistic career at the Venezuelan newspaper El Nacional, covering political and economic topics. Vinogradoff has worked as a journalist for more than 25 years and part of her career has included investigating corruption in Venezuela. She has also been international correspondent in Caracas for the Spanish newspaper El País and the Colombian magazine Semana. She currently works for the Spanish newspaper ABC and the Argentine outlet Clarín.", "title": "Career" } ]
Ludmila Vinogradoff Sorokin is a Chinese-born Venezuelan journalist. She has worked in several national and international media outlets, including El Nacional, El País, Semana, ABC and Clarín.
2023-12-14T14:03:57Z
2023-12-26T15:51:33Z
[ "Template:Cite book", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox person", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludmila_Vinogradoff
75,563,376
Kenhardt Solar Power Complex Station
The Kenhardt Solar Power Complex Station is a 540 MW (720,000 hp) solar power plant complex in South Africa. The complex comprises three power stations each with generation capacity of 180 megawatts. The three power plants feed their output into a battery energy storage system (BESS) with capacity of 225MW/1,140MWh, which modulates the power output to discharge a consistent 150 MW for 16.5 hours daily between the hours of 5am and 9.30pm. The power station complex is located in the town of Kenhardt, in Kai ǃGarib Local Municipality, in ZF Mgcawu District, in the Northern Cape Province of South Africa. Kenhardt is located approximately 117 kilometres (73 mi) south of Upington, the location of the district headquarters. The three power stations are Kenhardt Solar Power Plants 1, 2 and 3. The powerplants are located in close proximity on adjacent plots. Together, the energy complex supports 2,000,000 solar photovoltaic units collectively generating 540 megawatts of power. The solar power output of the three stations is fed into a lithium battery storage system with capacity of 225MW/1,140MWh. The BESS modulates the power and dispatches a consistent 150MW for 16.5 hours daily, between 5am until 9.30pm. The off-taker is Eskom, the national electricity public utility company. A 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) governs the terms of sale and purchase of the electricity between the parties. The power station is owned and was developed by a consortium of Scatec, a Norwegian independent power producer, and H1 Holdings Plc., a South African BEE company based in Cape Town. The table below illustrates the shareholding the solar power complex. The construction costs are reported as ZAR:16.4 billion (approx. US$962 million. Construction began in July 2022 and commercial commissioning was effected in December 2023. Scatec was assigned the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract, as well as the operations and maintenance (O&M) contract. This renewable infrastructure project received funding from a consortium of banks and development finance institutions. It is reported that ZAR:12.4 billion ($727 million) was borrowed from a group of financial institutions including Standard Bank Group, the arranger and British International Investment (BII).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Kenhardt Solar Power Complex Station is a 540 MW (720,000 hp) solar power plant complex in South Africa. The complex comprises three power stations each with generation capacity of 180 megawatts. The three power plants feed their output into a battery energy storage system (BESS) with capacity of 225MW/1,140MWh, which modulates the power output to discharge a consistent 150 MW for 16.5 hours daily between the hours of 5am and 9.30pm.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The power station complex is located in the town of Kenhardt, in Kai ǃGarib Local Municipality, in ZF Mgcawu District, in the Northern Cape Province of South Africa. Kenhardt is located approximately 117 kilometres (73 mi) south of Upington, the location of the district headquarters.", "title": "Location" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The three power stations are Kenhardt Solar Power Plants 1, 2 and 3. The powerplants are located in close proximity on adjacent plots. Together, the energy complex supports 2,000,000 solar photovoltaic units collectively generating 540 megawatts of power.", "title": "Overview" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The solar power output of the three stations is fed into a lithium battery storage system with capacity of 225MW/1,140MWh. The BESS modulates the power and dispatches a consistent 150MW for 16.5 hours daily, between 5am until 9.30pm. The off-taker is Eskom, the national electricity public utility company. A 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) governs the terms of sale and purchase of the electricity between the parties.", "title": "Overview" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The power station is owned and was developed by a consortium of Scatec, a Norwegian independent power producer, and H1 Holdings Plc., a South African BEE company based in Cape Town. The table below illustrates the shareholding the solar power complex.", "title": "Developers" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The construction costs are reported as ZAR:16.4 billion (approx. US$962 million. Construction began in July 2022 and commercial commissioning was effected in December 2023. Scatec was assigned the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract, as well as the operations and maintenance (O&M) contract.", "title": "Costs and commissioning" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "This renewable infrastructure project received funding from a consortium of banks and development finance institutions. It is reported that ZAR:12.4 billion ($727 million) was borrowed from a group of financial institutions including Standard Bank Group, the arranger and British International Investment (BII).", "title": "Funding" } ]
The Kenhardt Solar Power Complex Station is a 540 MW (720,000 hp) solar power plant complex in South Africa. The complex comprises three power stations each with generation capacity of 180 megawatts. The three power plants feed their output into a battery energy storage system (BESS) with capacity of 225MW/1,140MWh, which modulates the power output to discharge a consistent 150 MW for 16.5 hours daily between the hours of 5am and 9.30pm.
2023-12-14T14:04:28Z
2023-12-17T05:41:52Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenhardt_Solar_Power_Complex_Station
75,563,383
Vinelli
Vinelli is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinelli is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vinelli is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Felice Vinelli (1774–1825),Italian painter Paul Vinelli (1922–1997), Italian-American-Honduran economist
2023-12-14T14:05:42Z
2023-12-14T14:05:42Z
[ "Template:Short pages monitor", "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinelli
75,563,396
Vingren
Vingren is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vingren is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vingren is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Bror Vingren (1906–1980), Swedish wrestler Gunnar Vingren (1879–1933), Swedish evangelist
2023-12-14T14:07:20Z
2023-12-14T14:07:20Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vingren
75,563,404
Vinhas
Vinhas is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinhas is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vinhas is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Lúcio Mauro Vinhas de Souza, Brazilian-Portuguese economist Rui Vinhas, Portuguese cyclist
2023-12-14T14:08:32Z
2023-12-14T14:08:32Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinhas
75,563,409
Vinius (surname)
Vinius is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinius is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vinius is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Titus Vinius (12–69), Roman general Andrew Vinius (1641–1717), Russian statesman
2023-12-14T14:10:26Z
2023-12-14T14:10:26Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinius_(surname)
75,563,425
King Edward VII Memorial Hospital building, Penang
The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital building is situated in Macalister Road, George Town, Penang, Malaysia. When it opened in 1915 it was the first maternity hospital in Penang. The idea for the establishment of a maternity hospital in Penang was conceived following the death of King Edward VII in 1910. Throughout the British Empire, it was proposed that suitable memorials be erected in his honour, and Penang was invited by the British administration in Singapore to contribute funds. Instead, members of the Penang community decided to create their own memorial, and approached the Municipal Commission, headed by William Peel, its president, with a proposal for the creation Penang's first maternity hospital. The nearest maternity hospital was in Singapore, and the region suffered from high rates of infant mortality due to most women not having the help of trained nurses. Peel agreed to the idea and in 1911 established a committee to find a suitable site and organise fund raising. The following year, land on Macalister Road was secured by an indenture, dated 5 February 1912, executed in favour of Peel, as President of the Municipal Commission, and William Evans, Resident Councillor, who agreed to hold the land in trust for charitable purposes. The committee for the maternity hospital decided that it needed $100,000, and invited public subscriptions, raising $94,677 via 600 donors. The largest donor was leading businessman and member of the Legislative Council, August Huttenbach who, together with his brother, were credited with the success of the fundraising efforts. Designs for the hospital were invited, and Stark and McNeill's was chosen, with Robert Young appointed as contractors. On 11 September 1915, the maternity hospital was completed, and formally opened at a ceremony officiated by Alfred Bryant, Resident Councillor, and named the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital. In October, on a petition of the Municipal Commissioners, the Supreme Court formerly confirmed their appointment as trustees. An advisory committee was then established to manage it consisting of two government nominees (the First Magistrate and the Collector of Land Revenue), two municipal nominees (the President and the Health Officer), and three other members chosen by them. Expenses of maintaining the hospital were shared between the Municipality and the Government. When the hospital opened, it had around 50 beds, no resident doctors or midwives, but medical practitioners agreed to work free of charge attending to the poorer patients. Wealthy patients brought their own doctors and paid for beds in the first class section. The first matron was a Miss Macdonald, and later, Dr. George W. Park became the hospital's first full-time obstetrician who stayed until 1917. The number of patients steadily increased and in 1922, at the request of the Municipality, the Government took over the management of the hospital whilst the Municipal commissioners continued as trustees. Admissions in the early 1920s had risen to over 600 per year. For 1923, of the 4,257 births registered in Penang, 651 were from the hospital. It continued as the main maternity hospital in Penang until the 1950s when a new hospital was completed in Residency Road. After it closed, the building was occupied by the St. John's Ambulance and the Red Crescent Society. Later, it was used as a training centre for adult education, and occupied by various non-profit and private organisations. Beginning in 2017, the building was used by the Penang State Museum as temporary exhibition space pending the completion of the refurbishment of its site in Farquhar Street. Expected to take three years, works were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and were expected to be completed in 2024.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital building is situated in Macalister Road, George Town, Penang, Malaysia. When it opened in 1915 it was the first maternity hospital in Penang.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The idea for the establishment of a maternity hospital in Penang was conceived following the death of King Edward VII in 1910. Throughout the British Empire, it was proposed that suitable memorials be erected in his honour, and Penang was invited by the British administration in Singapore to contribute funds. Instead, members of the Penang community decided to create their own memorial, and approached the Municipal Commission, headed by William Peel, its president, with a proposal for the creation Penang's first maternity hospital. The nearest maternity hospital was in Singapore, and the region suffered from high rates of infant mortality due to most women not having the help of trained nurses.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Peel agreed to the idea and in 1911 established a committee to find a suitable site and organise fund raising. The following year, land on Macalister Road was secured by an indenture, dated 5 February 1912, executed in favour of Peel, as President of the Municipal Commission, and William Evans, Resident Councillor, who agreed to hold the land in trust for charitable purposes. The committee for the maternity hospital decided that it needed $100,000, and invited public subscriptions, raising $94,677 via 600 donors. The largest donor was leading businessman and member of the Legislative Council, August Huttenbach who, together with his brother, were credited with the success of the fundraising efforts. Designs for the hospital were invited, and Stark and McNeill's was chosen, with Robert Young appointed as contractors.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On 11 September 1915, the maternity hospital was completed, and formally opened at a ceremony officiated by Alfred Bryant, Resident Councillor, and named the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital. In October, on a petition of the Municipal Commissioners, the Supreme Court formerly confirmed their appointment as trustees. An advisory committee was then established to manage it consisting of two government nominees (the First Magistrate and the Collector of Land Revenue), two municipal nominees (the President and the Health Officer), and three other members chosen by them. Expenses of maintaining the hospital were shared between the Municipality and the Government.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "When the hospital opened, it had around 50 beds, no resident doctors or midwives, but medical practitioners agreed to work free of charge attending to the poorer patients. Wealthy patients brought their own doctors and paid for beds in the first class section. The first matron was a Miss Macdonald, and later, Dr. George W. Park became the hospital's first full-time obstetrician who stayed until 1917.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The number of patients steadily increased and in 1922, at the request of the Municipality, the Government took over the management of the hospital whilst the Municipal commissioners continued as trustees. Admissions in the early 1920s had risen to over 600 per year. For 1923, of the 4,257 births registered in Penang, 651 were from the hospital.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "It continued as the main maternity hospital in Penang until the 1950s when a new hospital was completed in Residency Road. After it closed, the building was occupied by the St. John's Ambulance and the Red Crescent Society. Later, it was used as a training centre for adult education, and occupied by various non-profit and private organisations.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Beginning in 2017, the building was used by the Penang State Museum as temporary exhibition space pending the completion of the refurbishment of its site in Farquhar Street. Expected to take three years, works were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and were expected to be completed in 2024.", "title": "History" } ]
The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital building is situated in Macalister Road, George Town, Penang, Malaysia. When it opened in 1915 it was the first maternity hospital in Penang.
2023-12-14T14:12:51Z
2023-12-17T17:33:56Z
[ "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite book" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Edward_VII_Memorial_Hospital_building,_Penang
75,563,431
Colorado's 2nd House of Representatives district
Colorado's 2nd House of Representatives district is one of 65 districts in the Colorado House of Representatives. It has been represented by Democrat Steven Woodrow since 2023. District 2 covers southern Denver. The district is located entirely within Colorado's 1st congressional district and overlaps with the 31st, 32nd and 34th districts of the Colorado Senate.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Colorado's 2nd House of Representatives district is one of 65 districts in the Colorado House of Representatives. It has been represented by Democrat Steven Woodrow since 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "District 2 covers southern Denver.", "title": "Geography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The district is located entirely within Colorado's 1st congressional district and overlaps with the 31st, 32nd and 34th districts of the Colorado Senate.", "title": "Geography" } ]
Colorado's 2nd House of Representatives district is one of 65 districts in the Colorado House of Representatives. It has been represented by Democrat Steven Woodrow since 2023.
2023-12-14T14:14:22Z
2023-12-14T14:14:22Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorado%27s_2nd_House_of_Representatives_district
75,563,434
Vinn
Vinn may refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinn may refer to:", "title": "" } ]
Vinn may refer to:
2023-12-14T14:14:51Z
2023-12-14T14:14:51Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinn
75,563,444
Vinot
Vinot may refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinot may refer to:", "title": "" } ]
Vinot may refer to:
2023-12-14T14:17:01Z
2023-12-14T14:17:20Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinot
75,563,449
Vinsant
Vinsant is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinsant is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vinsant is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Savannah Vinsant, American trampoline gymnast Wilma Vinsant (1917–1945), American flight nurse
2023-12-14T14:18:16Z
2023-12-14T14:18:16Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinsant
75,563,452
Joe Cattini
Alberto Giuseppe Antonio Cattini (17 January 1923 – 18 April 2023), known as Joe Cattini, was a British soldier who came to prominence in his nineties as a veteran of the Normandy landings in World War II and a leading campaigner for the British Normandy Memorial. At his death, shortly after his 100th birthday, he was believed to be one of only around half a dozen veterans left who fought on 6 June, 1944. The eldest of four brothers, Cattini was born in London to a family of café owners from Tuscany, Italy. He grew up in Hampstead. He joined the army in 1941 and landed on Gold Beach on D-Day as a bombardier with the 86th Field Regiment of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry. His role was to drive a three-ton ammunition truck loaded with 25lb shells and dozens of cans of petrol onto the beach. ′They laid carpets down so we didn’t sink into the sand,′ he told The Times seven decades later. ′There were bodies floating in the sea and on the beach. I had been in the civil defence reserve during the Blitz in London so it didn’t faze me, but the stench and carnage was terrible.′ After demobilisation, he returned to his career as an electrician. It was only in the last nine years of his life, prompted by the 70th anniversary of D-Day, that he joined veterans groups and became a familiar figure at memorial events. In 2016 he was awarded France′s highest honour, the Legion of Honour, in recognition of his part in the liberation of France. From 2019, he was an ambassador for the £30 million memorial to the 22,442 people who died under British command on D-Day and at the Battle of Normandy, which was unveiled in Ver-sur-Mer, Normandy in 2021. He was adamant that the teenage soldiers who cried for their mothers before dying on the beaches should be remembered. 'I pray for their souls every day,' he told the BBC. His funeral in Bury St Edmunds was attended by the British ambassador to Italy and Nicholas Witchell, a founding trustee of the British Normandy Memorial. The latter described him as ′a giant within the Normandy veteran community′. He married his first wife Mary in 1949. They had three children, Dominic, Frances and Marian. After Mary′s death in 1998 he married his second wife, Frances, and moved with her to New Zealand. After her death he settled in Eastleigh, Hampshire.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alberto Giuseppe Antonio Cattini (17 January 1923 – 18 April 2023), known as Joe Cattini, was a British soldier who came to prominence in his nineties as a veteran of the Normandy landings in World War II and a leading campaigner for the British Normandy Memorial. At his death, shortly after his 100th birthday, he was believed to be one of only around half a dozen veterans left who fought on 6 June, 1944.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The eldest of four brothers, Cattini was born in London to a family of café owners from Tuscany, Italy. He grew up in Hampstead.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "He joined the army in 1941 and landed on Gold Beach on D-Day as a bombardier with the 86th Field Regiment of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry. His role was to drive a three-ton ammunition truck loaded with 25lb shells and dozens of cans of petrol onto the beach. ′They laid carpets down so we didn’t sink into the sand,′ he told The Times seven decades later. ′There were bodies floating in the sea and on the beach. I had been in the civil defence reserve during the Blitz in London so it didn’t faze me, but the stench and carnage was terrible.′", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "After demobilisation, he returned to his career as an electrician. It was only in the last nine years of his life, prompted by the 70th anniversary of D-Day, that he joined veterans groups and became a familiar figure at memorial events.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 2016 he was awarded France′s highest honour, the Legion of Honour, in recognition of his part in the liberation of France.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "From 2019, he was an ambassador for the £30 million memorial to the 22,442 people who died under British command on D-Day and at the Battle of Normandy, which was unveiled in Ver-sur-Mer, Normandy in 2021. He was adamant that the teenage soldiers who cried for their mothers before dying on the beaches should be remembered. 'I pray for their souls every day,' he told the BBC.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "His funeral in Bury St Edmunds was attended by the British ambassador to Italy and Nicholas Witchell, a founding trustee of the British Normandy Memorial. The latter described him as ′a giant within the Normandy veteran community′.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "He married his first wife Mary in 1949. They had three children, Dominic, Frances and Marian. After Mary′s death in 1998 he married his second wife, Frances, and moved with her to New Zealand. After her death he settled in Eastleigh, Hampshire.", "title": "Family" } ]
Alberto Giuseppe Antonio Cattini, known as Joe Cattini, was a British soldier who came to prominence in his nineties as a veteran of the Normandy landings in World War II and a leading campaigner for the British Normandy Memorial. At his death, shortly after his 100th birthday, he was believed to be one of only around half a dozen veterans left who fought on 6 June, 1944. The eldest of four brothers, Cattini was born in London to a family of café owners from Tuscany, Italy. He grew up in Hampstead. He joined the army in 1941 and landed on Gold Beach on D-Day as a bombardier with the 86th Field Regiment of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry. His role was to drive a three-ton ammunition truck loaded with 25lb shells and dozens of cans of petrol onto the beach. ′They laid carpets down so we didn’t sink into the sand,′ he told The Times seven decades later. ′There were bodies floating in the sea and on the beach. I had been in the civil defence reserve during the Blitz in London so it didn’t faze me, but the stench and carnage was terrible.′ After demobilisation, he returned to his career as an electrician. It was only in the last nine years of his life, prompted by the 70th anniversary of D-Day, that he joined veterans groups and became a familiar figure at memorial events. In 2016 he was awarded France′s highest honour, the Legion of Honour, in recognition of his part in the liberation of France. From 2019, he was an ambassador for the £30 million memorial to the 22,442 people who died under British command on D-Day and at the Battle of Normandy, which was unveiled in Ver-sur-Mer, Normandy in 2021. He was adamant that the teenage soldiers who cried for their mothers before dying on the beaches should be remembered. 'I pray for their souls every day,' he told the BBC. His funeral in Bury St Edmunds was attended by the British ambassador to Italy and Nicholas Witchell, a founding trustee of the British Normandy Memorial. The latter described him as ′a giant within the Normandy veteran community′.
2023-12-14T14:18:24Z
2023-12-25T18:14:58Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Use dmy dates", "Template:Infobox person", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Cattini
75,563,458
Stella G. Mew
Stella G. Mew (1942-2022) was an Irish educator and CEO of the Yeats Society. She was the daughter of Ronald George Gillman Mew (1905-1996), an army officer, and Maureen Carmine Palmer (1903-1978), and with her brother Clive Ernest (1936-2013) she grew up at Shirley, Chapelizod, near the Phoenix Park in Dublin. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin in 1966. Stella Mew first taught at Alexandra College and Park House School in Dublin, before moving to Heathfield School in Berkshire and then becoming Head of the English Department at Clarendon School in Wales. In 1972 she was appointed as headmistress of Hillcourt in Glenageary, and the following year became Principal of the newly-formed Rathdown School. She was Principal for the next thirty years, retiring in 2002. After retirement she worked with Taylor University, Indiana, on the development of an Irish literature strand within an Anglo-Irish Studies programme. In 2005 she was invited to become CEO of the Yeats Society in County Sligo, which has run an annual Yeats Summer School for scholars since 1960. She spoke about her early love of Yeats, her discovery of his writing, her regular attendance at lectures given by Dr TR Henn at Trinity, and her first visit to the summer school, in an episode of the RTE Radio 1 show 'Sunday Miscellany' in 2021. Stella Mew died in October 2022. Her funeral took place in St Paul's Church in Glenageary, and her funeral cortege made a last lap of the grounds of Rathdown School.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Stella G. Mew (1942-2022) was an Irish educator and CEO of the Yeats Society. She was the daughter of Ronald George Gillman Mew (1905-1996), an army officer, and Maureen Carmine Palmer (1903-1978), and with her brother Clive Ernest (1936-2013) she grew up at Shirley, Chapelizod, near the Phoenix Park in Dublin. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin in 1966.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Stella Mew first taught at Alexandra College and Park House School in Dublin, before moving to Heathfield School in Berkshire and then becoming Head of the English Department at Clarendon School in Wales. In 1972 she was appointed as headmistress of Hillcourt in Glenageary, and the following year became Principal of the newly-formed Rathdown School. She was Principal for the next thirty years, retiring in 2002. After retirement she worked with Taylor University, Indiana, on the development of an Irish literature strand within an Anglo-Irish Studies programme. In 2005 she was invited to become CEO of the Yeats Society in County Sligo, which has run an annual Yeats Summer School for scholars since 1960.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "She spoke about her early love of Yeats, her discovery of his writing, her regular attendance at lectures given by Dr TR Henn at Trinity, and her first visit to the summer school, in an episode of the RTE Radio 1 show 'Sunday Miscellany' in 2021.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Stella Mew died in October 2022. Her funeral took place in St Paul's Church in Glenageary, and her funeral cortege made a last lap of the grounds of Rathdown School.", "title": "" } ]
Stella G. Mew (1942-2022) was an Irish educator and CEO of the Yeats Society. She was the daughter of Ronald George Gillman Mew (1905-1996), an army officer, and Maureen Carmine Palmer (1903-1978), and with her brother Clive Ernest (1936-2013) she grew up at Shirley, Chapelizod, near the Phoenix Park in Dublin. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin in 1966. Stella Mew first taught at Alexandra College and Park House School in Dublin, before moving to Heathfield School in Berkshire and then becoming Head of the English Department at Clarendon School in Wales. In 1972 she was appointed as headmistress of Hillcourt in Glenageary, and the following year became Principal of the newly-formed Rathdown School. She was Principal for the next thirty years, retiring in 2002. After retirement she worked with Taylor University, Indiana, on the development of an Irish literature strand within an Anglo-Irish Studies programme. In 2005 she was invited to become CEO of the Yeats Society in County Sligo, which has run an annual Yeats Summer School for scholars since 1960. She spoke about her early love of Yeats, her discovery of his writing, her regular attendance at lectures given by Dr TR Henn at Trinity, and her first visit to the summer school, in an episode of the RTE Radio 1 show 'Sunday Miscellany' in 2021. Stella Mew died in October 2022. Her funeral took place in St Paul's Church in Glenageary, and her funeral cortege made a last lap of the grounds of Rathdown School.
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2023-12-15T09:21:26Z
[ "Template:Cite news" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stella_G._Mew
75,563,472
Vinueza
Vinueza is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vinueza is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vinueza is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Humberto Vinueza (1942–2017), Ecuadorian poet Rosana Vinueza (1949–2009), Ecuadorian beauty queen
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2023-12-14T14:23:30Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinueza
75,563,479
C. P. Byrd
Charles Pinckney Byrd, Charles P. Byrd, Charles Byrd, and Black Heels on White Necks should link here Charles Pinckney Byrd (c. 1857 – November 1935) was a printing company proprietor in Atlanta, Georgia. He established his printing company in 1897. The business was a partnership for a time known as Byrd & Pattillo. Byrd incorporated Byrd Publishing Company and later, seeking to do textbook business, reincorporated as Byrd Printing Company. He was a native of Cuthbert, Georgia. He married twice, first to Pearl Bryan in 1880 whom he divorced in 1894, then to Cora Lyon in 1896. C. P. Byrd operated the Byrd Publishing Company in Atlanta, Georgia. From about 1909 - 1915, C. P. Byrd was State Printer. In 1927, The Byrd Publishing Company, C. P. Byrd president, advertised school and college textbooks and "literary productions of all kinds" on its letterhead. Its office was at 506-507 Norris Building. It was on Peachtree Street. Byrd published proceedings from encampments of the Grand Army of the Republic. In 1916 Byrd sued for an injunction against another printing company that was awarded the state printing job. He alleged that state officials were stockholders and that the company did not meet the criteria for state printer. Byrd married Pearl Bryan, daughter of Mary E. Bryan, in 1880. Mary stayed with him and launched The Old Homestead publication until she became afflicted with typhoid and moved to Florida for relief. He took over the publication while she pledged to continue as a writer for it. Charles and Pearl divorced in 1894. He was on the Executive Committee of the Georgia Printers' Association. He served as president when it was known as Typothetae. He purchased several presses. For $250,000, he acquired property at Peachtree and Kimball streets for a 10-story hotel. The Colonial Records of Georgia compiled by Allen D. Candler Black Heels on White Necks or A Fight for Supremacy is a text deriding Social Equality, castigating "Republican Supremacy", and pronouncing white supremacy. It defends lynching, calls out northern hypocrisy, calls out "scalawags" and "carpetbaggers" and defends Southern institutions including slavery. It was written anonymously by an author who identifies herself as female. The tome recounts outrages such as a white female postal employee being introduced to a "negro" hire. The signature of Ephie Augustus Williams appears in a copy of the book. He was a black Knight of Pythias leader. Byrd published the 26 volume Colonial Records of the State of Georgia. Scraps of song and southern scenes; a collection of humorous and pathetic poems and descriptive sketches of plantation life in the backwoods of Georgia by Montgomery M. Folsom (1889) The Confederate Records of the State of Georgia (1909) Savannah Line steamship brochure (12 pages) Journal of the House of Representatives (1911) Second Report on the Roads of Georgia" Geological Survey of Georgia
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Charles Pinckney Byrd, Charles P. Byrd, Charles Byrd, and Black Heels on White Necks should link here Charles Pinckney Byrd was a printing company proprietor in Atlanta, Georgia. He established his printing company in 1897. The business was a partnership for a time known as Byrd & Pattillo. Byrd incorporated Byrd Publishing Company and later, seeking to do textbook business, reincorporated as Byrd Printing Company. He was a native of Cuthbert, Georgia. He married twice, first to Pearl Bryan in 1880 whom he divorced in 1894, then to Cora Lyon in 1896.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._P._Byrd
75,563,480
I'LL-IT (group)
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Vioreanu
Vioreanu is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vioreanu is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vioreanu is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Dimitrie P. Vioreanu (1831–1881), Romanian jurist Mihai Vioreanu, Romanian rugby union player
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vioreanu
75,563,485
I'LL-IT (South Korean group)
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I'LL-IT (South Korean band)
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2023-12-14T14:24:06Z
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2023-12-14T14:24:09Z
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Araltobe kurgan
The Araltobe kurgan (Ru: Аралтобе курган) is a burial ground found near Araltobe, Zhylyoi District, in northwestern Kazakhstan, thought to belong to a member of the post-Saka Sarmatian culture, and dated to the 3rd-2nd century BCE. The mound (Zhylyoi "Araltobe" necropolis 1-mound) was excavated in 1999 in the Atyraw region by archaeologists Zeinulla Samashev and Zhumash Dzhetybaeva. They found the remains of a "Golden Man", who presents some parallels with similar "Golden men" found in Issyk kurgan or the kurgan at Shilikty. Long swords with T-shaped pommel and long swords with mushroom-shaped pommel were discovered during the excavation. These are types of "Scythian swords" usually found in the Scythian/Saka kurgans in Central Asia and Eastern Europe, but also known from Sauromations burials as in tumulus no. 3 of the Onaibulak graveyard, tumulus no. 1 and 2 of the Mortik graveyard, or tumulus no. 1 of the Araltobe graveyard. About 400 gold objects were discovered in the tomb.
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The Araltobe kurgan is a burial ground found near Araltobe, Zhylyoi District, in northwestern Kazakhstan, thought to belong to a member of the post-Saka Sarmatian culture, and dated to the 3rd-2nd century BCE. The mound was excavated in 1999 in the Atyraw region by archaeologists Zeinulla Samashev and Zhumash Dzhetybaeva. They found the remains of a "Golden Man", who presents some parallels with similar "Golden men" found in Issyk kurgan or the kurgan at Shilikty. Long swords with T-shaped pommel and long swords with mushroom-shaped pommel were discovered during the excavation. These are types of "Scythian swords" usually found in the Scythian/Saka kurgans in Central Asia and Eastern Europe, but also known from Sauromations burials as in tumulus no. 3 of the Onaibulak graveyard, tumulus no. 1 and 2 of the Mortik graveyard, or tumulus no. 1 of the Araltobe graveyard. About 400 gold objects were discovered in the tomb.
2023-12-14T14:27:01Z
2023-12-31T09:23:30Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Araltobe_kurgan
75,563,497
Sárosi
Sárosi is a Hungarian surname. Notable people with the name include:
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Sárosi is a Hungarian surname. Notable people with the name include: Béla Sárosi, Hungarian football player and manager László Sárosi (footballer) (1932–2016), Hungarian football player and coach László Sárosi, Hungarian former water polo player Laura Sárosi, Hungarian badminton player
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A1rosi
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Virchenko
Virchenko is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Virchenko is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Virchenko is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Nina Virchenko, Ukrainian mathematician Oleksii Virchenko, Ukrainian Paralympic swimmer
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[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virchenko
75,563,508
Inaspettata
Inaspettata is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 13 April 2010 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Inaspettata is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 13 April 2010 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.", "title": "" } ]
Inaspettata is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 13 April 2010 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.
2023-12-14T14:28:20Z
2023-12-30T01:16:46Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inaspettata
75,563,516
Virdee (surname)
Virdee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Virdee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Virdee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Daljinder Singh Virdee, British pharmacist Suzanne Virdee, British journalist Tejinder Virdee, Kenyan physicist
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virdee_(surname)
75,563,517
2023–24 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team
The 2023–24 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team represents the University of Tulsa during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Hurricane, led by third-year head coach Angie Nelp, play their home games at the Reynolds Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma as members of the American Athletic Conference. The Golden Hurricane finished the 2022–23 season 17–13, 7–9 in AAC play to finish in a tie for sixth place. As the #7 seed in the AAC tournament, they were upset by #10 seed UCF in the first round. Sources:
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The 2023–24 Tulsa Golden Hurricane women's basketball team represents the University of Tulsa during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Golden Hurricane, led by third-year head coach Angie Nelp, play their home games at the Reynolds Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma as members of the American Athletic Conference.
2023-12-14T14:30:02Z
2023-12-26T07:15:22Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324_Tulsa_Golden_Hurricane_women%27s_basketball_team
75,563,521
Virdung
Virdung is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Virdung is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Virdung is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Johannes Virdung, German astrologer Sebastian Virdung, German composer
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virdung
75,563,537
Sunait Chutintaranond
Sunait Chutintaranond (Thai: สุเนตร ชุตินธรานนท์ RTGS: Sunet Chutintharanon; born 1956) is a Thai historian and screenwriter. He is a professor of history at the Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University. His field of expertise is the pre-modern history of Thailand and mainland Southeast Asia, especially the Ayutthaya Kingdom, the Thai-Burma relations, and multicultural societies in Thailand. Together with director Chatrichalerm Yukol, he has written the screenplays of several historical drama films, most notably the King Naresuan series. Sunait Chutintaranond completed his undergraduate studies of history at Thammasat University, his bachelor's degree in 1978 was awarded with first-class honors and gold medal. He continued his studies in the United States at Cornell University's Southeast Asian Studies program, completing his M.A. in history in 1982 and Ph.D. in 1990. The topic of his dissertation was Cakravartin: Ideology, Reason and Manifestation of Siamese and Burmese Kings in Traditional Warfare (1548–1605). A professor of history at the Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University, Sunait served as the director of the university's Thai Studies Centre, director of the Institute of Asian Studies and dean of the Graduate School. He has published mostly on the mid- to late Ayutthaya period (16th to 18th century) and its relationships and conflicts with powers in neighbouring Burma.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Sunait Chutintaranond (Thai: สุเนตร ชุตินธรานนท์ RTGS: Sunet Chutintharanon; born 1956) is a Thai historian and screenwriter. He is a professor of history at the Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University. His field of expertise is the pre-modern history of Thailand and mainland Southeast Asia, especially the Ayutthaya Kingdom, the Thai-Burma relations, and multicultural societies in Thailand. Together with director Chatrichalerm Yukol, he has written the screenplays of several historical drama films, most notably the King Naresuan series.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Sunait Chutintaranond completed his undergraduate studies of history at Thammasat University, his bachelor's degree in 1978 was awarded with first-class honors and gold medal. He continued his studies in the United States at Cornell University's Southeast Asian Studies program, completing his M.A. in history in 1982 and Ph.D. in 1990. The topic of his dissertation was Cakravartin: Ideology, Reason and Manifestation of Siamese and Burmese Kings in Traditional Warfare (1548–1605).", "title": "Life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "A professor of history at the Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University, Sunait served as the director of the university's Thai Studies Centre, director of the Institute of Asian Studies and dean of the Graduate School. He has published mostly on the mid- to late Ayutthaya period (16th to 18th century) and its relationships and conflicts with powers in neighbouring Burma.", "title": "Life" } ]
Sunait Chutintaranond is a Thai historian and screenwriter. He is a professor of history at the Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University. His field of expertise is the pre-modern history of Thailand and mainland Southeast Asia, especially the Ayutthaya Kingdom, the Thai-Burma relations, and multicultural societies in Thailand. Together with director Chatrichalerm Yukol, he has written the screenplays of several historical drama films, most notably the King Naresuan series.
2023-12-14T14:33:40Z
2023-12-18T00:34:12Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunait_Chutintaranond
75,563,538
Viriviri
Viriviri may refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Viriviri may refer to:", "title": "" } ]
Viriviri may refer to:
2023-12-14T14:34:02Z
2023-12-14T14:34:12Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viriviri
75,563,555
Virkus
Virkus is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Virkus is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Virkus is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Scott Virkus, American football player Tarmo Virkus, Estonian rower
2023-12-14T14:36:14Z
2023-12-15T05:21:23Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virkus
75,563,577
Duminga Ndala
Duminga Kakuhu Ndala is a Namibian youth leader and politician who currently serves as Chairperson of the Namibian opposition , Landless People's Movement Youth Command Element. Ndala was educated at the University of Namibia where she graduated with a political science degree in 2019. Ndala has been the inaugural leader of the LPM Youth element. One of the key youth members of the party's youth organizers, she leads its youth wing. In 2020, she contested for Namibian local authority elections.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Duminga Kakuhu Ndala is a Namibian youth leader and politician who currently serves as Chairperson of the Namibian opposition , Landless People's Movement Youth Command Element.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Ndala was educated at the University of Namibia where she graduated with a political science degree in 2019.", "title": "Education" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Ndala has been the inaugural leader of the LPM Youth element. One of the key youth members of the party's youth organizers, she leads its youth wing. In 2020, she contested for Namibian local authority elections.", "title": "Politics" } ]
Duminga Kakuhu Ndala is a Namibian youth leader and politician who currently serves as Chairperson of the Namibian opposition, Landless People's Movement Youth Command Element.
2023-12-14T14:38:50Z
2023-12-15T10:27:57Z
[]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duminga_Ndala
75,563,585
Visak (disambiguation)
Visak is a village in Iran: Visak may also refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Visak is a village in Iran:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Visak may also refer to:", "title": "" } ]
Visak is a village in Iran: Visak may also refer to:
2023-12-14T14:39:47Z
2023-12-14T14:39:47Z
[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visak_(disambiguation)
75,563,604
Susan K. Martin
Susan Katherine Martin (born 1942) is an American librarian. She has worked as a university librarian and was executive director of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. Martin was born in Cambridge, England in 1942. Her parents were pianist Jolan (née Schonfeld) and Egon Orowan, a native of Budapest, Hungary. Both of her parents fled Nazi Germany because of their Jewish ancestry, reuniting and marrying in England. Her family moved to Belmont, Massaschusetts in the United States in 1950, and she became a naturalized citizen in 1961. Her father was a noted professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She graduated from Belmont High School in 1959. Martin attended Tufts University, graduating with a B.A. in romance languages in 1963. She received a Master of Library Science from Simmons College in 1965. She interned at the Harvard College Library from 1963 to 1965. She attended the University of California, Berkeley, receiving a Ph.D. in library and information science in 1983. Martin worked as a systems librarian at Harvard University from 1963 to 1973. She was the head of library systems office at Berkeley at the University of California, Berkeley Libraries from 1973 to 1979. Next, she was the director of the Milton S. Eisenhower Library at Johns Hopkins University from 1979 to 1988. In 1984, Martin became the Samuel Lazerow distinguished lecturer at Drexel University. She was the executive director National Commission on Libraries and Information Science from 1988 to 1990. For this position, she was responsible for developing legislation and advising the executive and legislative branches about the needs of the libraries. She also directed and planned national library and information science programs with state, local, and private organization. Martin was the university librarian of Georgetown University from 1990 to 2001. In 2001, she became the president of SKM Associates, a library management consulting firm. In September 2002, she became a part-time visiting program officer for scholarly communications with the Association of College and Research Libraries. Martin became a fellow in the Council on Library Resources in 1973. In 1994, she was elected president of the Association of College and Research Libraries. She was also president of Library and Information Technology Association and the Universal Serials and Book Exchange. She was an American Library Association delegate to the Soviet Union in November 1976. She has written numerous articles and monographs on library automation. She was the editor of the Journal of Library Automation from 1973 to 1977 and an was on the board of consultants for Library Issues: Briefings for Faculty and Adminstrators. Martin received the Simmons College Distinguished Alumni Award in 1977. When she retired from Georgetown in 2001, members of the Library Advisory Council established The Susan K. Martin Fund for Innovative Information Technologies in her honor. In addition, Thomas J. Healey family established The Susan K. Martin, Ph.D., Fund for Science Fiction Award Collections at Georgetown in her honor in 2001. She married David S. Martin of New Bedford, Massachusetts in June 1962. He was the dean of School of Education at Galludaet University. She became one of the first female members of the Cosmos Club in 1988. She donated her father's papers to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Susan Katherine Martin (born 1942) is an American librarian. She has worked as a university librarian and was executive director of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Martin was born in Cambridge, England in 1942. Her parents were pianist Jolan (née Schonfeld) and Egon Orowan, a native of Budapest, Hungary. Both of her parents fled Nazi Germany because of their Jewish ancestry, reuniting and marrying in England. Her family moved to Belmont, Massaschusetts in the United States in 1950, and she became a naturalized citizen in 1961. Her father was a noted professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "She graduated from Belmont High School in 1959. Martin attended Tufts University, graduating with a B.A. in romance languages in 1963. She received a Master of Library Science from Simmons College in 1965. She interned at the Harvard College Library from 1963 to 1965. She attended the University of California, Berkeley, receiving a Ph.D. in library and information science in 1983.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Martin worked as a systems librarian at Harvard University from 1963 to 1973. She was the head of library systems office at Berkeley at the University of California, Berkeley Libraries from 1973 to 1979. Next, she was the director of the Milton S. Eisenhower Library at Johns Hopkins University from 1979 to 1988. In 1984, Martin became the Samuel Lazerow distinguished lecturer at Drexel University.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "She was the executive director National Commission on Libraries and Information Science from 1988 to 1990. For this position, she was responsible for developing legislation and advising the executive and legislative branches about the needs of the libraries. She also directed and planned national library and information science programs with state, local, and private organization.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Martin was the university librarian of Georgetown University from 1990 to 2001. In 2001, she became the president of SKM Associates, a library management consulting firm. In September 2002, she became a part-time visiting program officer for scholarly communications with the Association of College and Research Libraries.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Martin became a fellow in the Council on Library Resources in 1973. In 1994, she was elected president of the Association of College and Research Libraries. She was also president of Library and Information Technology Association and the Universal Serials and Book Exchange. She was an American Library Association delegate to the Soviet Union in November 1976.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "She has written numerous articles and monographs on library automation. She was the editor of the Journal of Library Automation from 1973 to 1977 and an was on the board of consultants for Library Issues: Briefings for Faculty and Adminstrators.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Martin received the Simmons College Distinguished Alumni Award in 1977. When she retired from Georgetown in 2001, members of the Library Advisory Council established The Susan K. Martin Fund for Innovative Information Technologies in her honor. In addition, Thomas J. Healey family established The Susan K. Martin, Ph.D., Fund for Science Fiction Award Collections at Georgetown in her honor in 2001.", "title": "Awards and honors" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "She married David S. Martin of New Bedford, Massachusetts in June 1962. He was the dean of School of Education at Galludaet University. She became one of the first female members of the Cosmos Club in 1988. She donated her father's papers to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries.", "title": "Personal life" } ]
Susan Katherine Martin is an American librarian. She has worked as a university librarian and was executive director of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science.
2023-12-14T14:41:55Z
2023-12-22T20:43:09Z
[ "Template:Cite book", "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox people", "Template:ISBN", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_K._Martin
75,563,606
De Visch
Visch is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Visch is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Visch is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Karel de Visch (1596–1666), Cistercian bibliographer Matthias de Visch (1701–1765), Flemish painter Soraya de Visch Eijbergen, Dutch badminton player
2023-12-14T14:42:07Z
2023-12-14T15:32:42Z
[ "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Visch
75,563,616
Visee
Visee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Visee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Visee is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Robert de Visée, French lutenist Tobias Visee, Dutch cricketer
2023-12-14T14:43:22Z
2023-12-14T14:43:22Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visee
75,563,628
Viseur
Viseur is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Viseur is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Viseur is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Edgard Viseur, Belgian middle-distance runner Gus Viseur (1915–1974), Belgian/French accordionist Suzanne Cesbron-Viseur (1879–1967), French soprano
2023-12-14T14:45:05Z
2023-12-14T14:45:05Z
[ "Template:Short pages monitor", "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viseur
75,563,639
Alvania bozcaadensis
Alvania bozcaadensis is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Rissoidae. The length of the shell attains 2.4 mm. This marine species occurs in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Turkey.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alvania bozcaadensis is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Rissoidae.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The length of the shell attains 2.4 mm.", "title": "Description" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "This marine species occurs in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Turkey.", "title": "Distribution" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
Alvania bozcaadensis is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk or micromollusk in the family Rissoidae.
2023-12-14T14:46:21Z
2023-12-25T15:00:06Z
[ "Template:Speciesbox", "Template:Expand section", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Taxonbar", "Template:Commons category", "Template:Rissoidae-stub", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvania_bozcaadensis
75,563,661
Viskari
Viskari is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Viskari is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Viskari is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Antti Viskari (1928–2007), Finnish long-distance runner Kalevi Viskari (1928–2018), Finnish gymnast
2023-12-14T14:50:06Z
2023-12-14T14:50:06Z
[ "Template:Short pages monitor", "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viskari
75,563,667
Vislie
Vislie is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vislie is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vislie is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Jon Vislie (1896–1945), Norwegian lawyer Vetle Vislie (1858–1933), Norwegian educationalist
2023-12-14T14:51:03Z
2023-12-14T14:51:03Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vislie
75,563,675
Dave Foster (guitarist)
Dave Foster (born January 1971) is an English progressive rock guitarist, known for his work with Steve Rothery, Panic Room and Big Big Train, as well as for leading his own band The Dave Foster Band. Foster was born in St Helens, Merseyside, he started playing guitar at age 6. In 1987 he started music college in Liverpool before moving to the Leigh College of Music after a year, where he formed Mr So-&-So with Shaun McGowan (bass & vocals), Leon Parr (drums), Kieren Twist (keyboards) and Charlotte Evans (vocals). Who released three albums before disbanding in 2001. Prior to recording The Overlap, Foster met Steve Rothery of Marillion, who was a fan of Mr So-&-So and signed the band to his label Dorian Music. Foster formed Sleeping Giant in 2001 with Charlotte Evans on vocals, Leon Parr on drums, Simon Crumley on bass and James Rimmer on keyboards. The band released two EPs (Primates and Embers) before disbanding in 2006. In 2008, Foster joined the live band for Steve Rothery's folk rock project, The Wishing Tree, which also featured Marillion's Pete Trewavas. In 2011 Foster released his debut solo album Gravity, which featured Dutch vocalist Dinet Poortman, whom he met at Marillion weekend and would regularly collaborate with. In 2013, Foster joined the Steve Rothery band, alongside Leon Parr (drums), Yatim Halimi (bass) and Riccardo Romano (keyboards) with Martin Jakubski (vocals). Foster co-wrote Rothery's first solo album, The Ghosts Of PripyatI in 2014, which features guest appearances from Steven Wilson and Steve Hackett. In 2015, Foster joined Welsh progressive rock band, Panic Room, as their lead guitarist on their Wildfire Tour. Appearing on their albums Essence (2015) and Screens – Live In London (2018). Foster left Panic Room in 2018 alongside bassist Yatim Halimi. Foster released his second solo album, Dreamless, in 2016, again featuring Poortman. He played his debut performance as the Dave Foster Band at the Panic Room Weekend in May 2016, alongside Mr So-&-So member Leon Parr and Poortman. The band third album, Nocebo, was released in 2019 with some shows being played before COVID-19 stopped them. His fourth album Glimmer was released in May 2023. In 2020, Foster joined the live band of Big Big Train, as a replacement for Dave Gregory, who left earlier that year. Appearing on their albums Common Ground (2021) and Welcome To The Planet (2022) and their tours from September 2022. He did not tour with the band in August and September 2023 due to commitments to the Steve Rothery band, for those dates he was replaced by Italian guitarist Maria Barbieri. He is also not going to tour with the band for US tour dates in March 2024, so the band can have a trumpet player and multi-instrumentalist.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Dave Foster (born January 1971) is an English progressive rock guitarist, known for his work with Steve Rothery, Panic Room and Big Big Train, as well as for leading his own band The Dave Foster Band.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Foster was born in St Helens, Merseyside, he started playing guitar at age 6. In 1987 he started music college in Liverpool before moving to the Leigh College of Music after a year, where he formed Mr So-&-So with Shaun McGowan (bass & vocals), Leon Parr (drums), Kieren Twist (keyboards) and Charlotte Evans (vocals). Who released three albums before disbanding in 2001.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Prior to recording The Overlap, Foster met Steve Rothery of Marillion, who was a fan of Mr So-&-So and signed the band to his label Dorian Music. Foster formed Sleeping Giant in 2001 with Charlotte Evans on vocals, Leon Parr on drums, Simon Crumley on bass and James Rimmer on keyboards. The band released two EPs (Primates and Embers) before disbanding in 2006.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 2008, Foster joined the live band for Steve Rothery's folk rock project, The Wishing Tree, which also featured Marillion's Pete Trewavas. In 2011 Foster released his debut solo album Gravity, which featured Dutch vocalist Dinet Poortman, whom he met at Marillion weekend and would regularly collaborate with.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In 2013, Foster joined the Steve Rothery band, alongside Leon Parr (drums), Yatim Halimi (bass) and Riccardo Romano (keyboards) with Martin Jakubski (vocals). Foster co-wrote Rothery's first solo album, The Ghosts Of PripyatI in 2014, which features guest appearances from Steven Wilson and Steve Hackett.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2015, Foster joined Welsh progressive rock band, Panic Room, as their lead guitarist on their Wildfire Tour. Appearing on their albums Essence (2015) and Screens – Live In London (2018). Foster left Panic Room in 2018 alongside bassist Yatim Halimi.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Foster released his second solo album, Dreamless, in 2016, again featuring Poortman. He played his debut performance as the Dave Foster Band at the Panic Room Weekend in May 2016, alongside Mr So-&-So member Leon Parr and Poortman. The band third album, Nocebo, was released in 2019 with some shows being played before COVID-19 stopped them. His fourth album Glimmer was released in May 2023.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In 2020, Foster joined the live band of Big Big Train, as a replacement for Dave Gregory, who left earlier that year. Appearing on their albums Common Ground (2021) and Welcome To The Planet (2022) and their tours from September 2022. He did not tour with the band in August and September 2023 due to commitments to the Steve Rothery band, for those dates he was replaced by Italian guitarist Maria Barbieri. He is also not going to tour with the band for US tour dates in March 2024, so the band can have a trumpet player and multi-instrumentalist.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Dave Foster is an English progressive rock guitarist, known for his work with Steve Rothery, Panic Room and Big Big Train, as well as for leading his own band The Dave Foster Band.
2023-12-14T14:52:52Z
2023-12-27T20:46:38Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Foster_(guitarist)
75,563,680
Vismes (surname)
Vismes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vismes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vismes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alphonse de Vismes (1746–1792), French playwright Jacques de Vismes (1745–1819), French writer William Francis de Vismes Kane (1840–1918), Irish entomologist
2023-12-14T14:53:09Z
2023-12-14T15:01:17Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vismes_(surname)
75,563,688
Verona of Leefdaal
Verona of Leefdaal (French: Vérona de Leefdael, Dutch: Verona van Leefdaal) is a medieval folk saint, venerated in her adopted hometown of Leefdaal, presently part of the municipality of Bertem, Flemish Brabant, Belgium. According to tradition, Verona was the sister of Veronus of Lembeek and a great-granddaughter of Charlemagne. According to tradition, Saint Verona was born in the Rhineland, the daughter of Louis the German. While looking for the grave of her twin brother Veronus, Verona took a rest at a roadside chapel in Leefdaal. Here, the voice of God apparently revealed two secrets to Verona: she could find her brother’s grave in Lembeek; and she would be buried underneath the chapel in which she was presently resting. She went on her way and found her brother’s grave in Lembeek, before returning to her native Rhineland, where she established a number of convents before dying in 870. Her body was then brought by oxen to Leefdaal. Verona is worshipped in the Sint-Verona [nl] chapel in Leefdaal, which displays an 18th-century statue of her. According to some philological interpretations, Verona never existed and the name of the St Verona chapel actually comes from a local hill named Vroienberg, which means "hill of the Lord".
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Verona of Leefdaal (French: Vérona de Leefdael, Dutch: Verona van Leefdaal) is a medieval folk saint, venerated in her adopted hometown of Leefdaal, presently part of the municipality of Bertem, Flemish Brabant, Belgium. According to tradition, Verona was the sister of Veronus of Lembeek and a great-granddaughter of Charlemagne.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "According to tradition, Saint Verona was born in the Rhineland, the daughter of Louis the German. While looking for the grave of her twin brother Veronus, Verona took a rest at a roadside chapel in Leefdaal. Here, the voice of God apparently revealed two secrets to Verona: she could find her brother’s grave in Lembeek; and she would be buried underneath the chapel in which she was presently resting. She went on her way and found her brother’s grave in Lembeek, before returning to her native Rhineland, where she established a number of convents before dying in 870. Her body was then brought by oxen to Leefdaal.", "title": "Overview" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Verona is worshipped in the Sint-Verona [nl] chapel in Leefdaal, which displays an 18th-century statue of her. According to some philological interpretations, Verona never existed and the name of the St Verona chapel actually comes from a local hill named Vroienberg, which means \"hill of the Lord\".", "title": "Overview" } ]
Verona of Leefdaal is a medieval folk saint, venerated in her adopted hometown of Leefdaal, presently part of the municipality of Bertem, Flemish Brabant, Belgium. According to tradition, Verona was the sister of Veronus of Lembeek and a great-granddaughter of Charlemagne.
2023-12-14T14:53:48Z
2023-12-15T10:43:34Z
[ "Template:Lang-fr", "Template:Lang-nl", "Template:Ill", "Template:Lang", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:RC-bio-stub", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verona_of_Leefdaal
75,563,690
Ranko Petković
Ranko Petković (Serbian Cyrillic: Ранко Петковић, 21 October 1947) is a retired Bosnian and Yugoslav footballer who played as a forward. He spent the majority of his career with FK Sarajevo in the Yugoslav First League, before eventually moving to the 2nd Bundesliga where he stayed for five seasons.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Ranko Petković (Serbian Cyrillic: Ранко Петковић, 21 October 1947) is a retired Bosnian and Yugoslav footballer who played as a forward. He spent the majority of his career with FK Sarajevo in the Yugoslav First League, before eventually moving to the 2nd Bundesliga where he stayed for five seasons.", "title": "" } ]
Ranko Petković is a retired Bosnian and Yugoslav footballer who played as a forward. He spent the majority of his career with FK Sarajevo in the Yugoslav First League, before eventually moving to the 2nd Bundesliga where he stayed for five seasons.
2023-12-14T14:54:17Z
2023-12-14T18:39:26Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranko_Petkovi%C4%87
75,563,720
1991 York City Council election
The 1991 York City Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of York City Council in North Yorkshire, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 1991 York City Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of York City Council in North Yorkshire, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.", "title": "" } ]
The 1991 York City Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of York City Council in North Yorkshire, England. This was on the same day as other local elections.
2023-12-14T15:00:33Z
2023-12-14T15:00:33Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991_York_City_Council_election
75,563,729
Visontai
Visontai is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Visontai is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Visontai is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: András Visontai, Hungarian ice dancer Soma Visontai (1854–1925), Hungarian lawyer
2023-12-14T15:02:07Z
2023-12-14T15:02:07Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visontai
75,563,731
Shubha Satheesh
Shubha Satheesh (born 13 July 1999) is an Indian cricketer who currently plays for Railways and Royal Challengers Bangalore. She plays as a right-handed batter and right-arm medium bowler. She has previously played for Karnataka. She made her international debut in December 2023, in a Test match for India against England. Shubha was born on 13 July 1999 in Bangalore. Shubha made her debut for Karnataka in November 2012, against Andhra. She scored her maiden Twenty20 half-century in January 2017, with 61* against Saurashtra, and her maiden List A half-century in December 2018, with 72 against Tamil Nadu. She was the fourth-highest run-scorer in the 2020–21 Women's Senior One Day Trophy, with 346 runs including four half-centuries. She moved to Railways ahead of the 2023–24 season. She played two matches for South Zone in the 2017–18 Senior Women's Cricket Inter Zonal Three Day Game tournament. In December 2023, she was signed by Royal Challengers Bangalore for the second season of the Women's Premier League. In December 2023, Shubha earned her first call-up to the India squad for the side's Test matches against England and Australia. She made her international debut in the Test match against England, scoring 69 in the first innings.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Shubha Satheesh (born 13 July 1999) is an Indian cricketer who currently plays for Railways and Royal Challengers Bangalore. She plays as a right-handed batter and right-arm medium bowler. She has previously played for Karnataka.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She made her international debut in December 2023, in a Test match for India against England.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Shubha was born on 13 July 1999 in Bangalore.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Shubha made her debut for Karnataka in November 2012, against Andhra. She scored her maiden Twenty20 half-century in January 2017, with 61* against Saurashtra, and her maiden List A half-century in December 2018, with 72 against Tamil Nadu. She was the fourth-highest run-scorer in the 2020–21 Women's Senior One Day Trophy, with 346 runs including four half-centuries. She moved to Railways ahead of the 2023–24 season.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "She played two matches for South Zone in the 2017–18 Senior Women's Cricket Inter Zonal Three Day Game tournament.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In December 2023, she was signed by Royal Challengers Bangalore for the second season of the Women's Premier League.", "title": "Domestic career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In December 2023, Shubha earned her first call-up to the India squad for the side's Test matches against England and Australia. She made her international debut in the Test match against England, scoring 69 in the first innings.", "title": "International career" } ]
Shubha Satheesh is an Indian cricketer who currently plays for Railways and Royal Challengers Bangalore. She plays as a right-handed batter and right-arm medium bowler. She has previously played for Karnataka. She made her international debut in December 2023, in a Test match for India against England.
2023-12-14T15:02:19Z
2023-12-21T09:19:36Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shubha_Satheesh
75,563,746
Visram
Visram is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Visram is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Visram is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Allidina Visram (1851–1916), Indian settler Shazi Visram, American entrepreneur Sugra Visram (1923–2012), Ugandan politician
2023-12-14T15:04:01Z
2023-12-14T15:04:01Z
[ "Template:Short pages monitor", "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visram
75,563,756
L'amore comporta
L'amore comporta is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 8 April 2014 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "L'amore comporta is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 8 April 2014 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.", "title": "" } ]
L'amore comporta is a studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Biagio Antonacci, released on 8 April 2014 on his label Iris and distributed by Sony Music.
2023-12-14T15:04:29Z
2023-12-30T01:19:18Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%27amore_comporta
75,563,775
Viswanadham
Viswanadham is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Viswanadham is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Viswanadham is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: N. Viswanadham, Indian academic Tenneti Viswanadham (1895–1979), Telugu politician Vysyaraju Kasi Viswanadham Raju, Indian politician
2023-12-14T15:06:21Z
2023-12-14T15:06:21Z
[ "Template:Short pages monitor", "Template:Surname" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viswanadham
75,563,786
Florida Film Critics Circle Awards 2023
28th FFCC Awards December 21, 2023 Best Picture: TBA The 28th Florida Film Critics Circle Awards will be held on December 21, 2023. The nominations were announced on December 13, 2023, led by Oppenheimer with ten nominations, followed by Killers of the Flower Moon with eight and May December with seven. Winners will be listed at the top of each list in bold, while the runner-ups for each category will be listed under them.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "28th FFCC Awards", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "December 21, 2023", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Best Picture: TBA", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The 28th Florida Film Critics Circle Awards will be held on December 21, 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The nominations were announced on December 13, 2023, led by Oppenheimer with ten nominations, followed by Killers of the Flower Moon with eight and May December with seven.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Winners will be listed at the top of each list in bold, while the runner-ups for each category will be listed under them.", "title": "Nominees" } ]
The 28th Florida Film Critics Circle Awards will be held on December 21, 2023. The nominations were announced on December 13, 2023, led by Oppenheimer with ten nominations, followed by Killers of the Flower Moon with eight and May December with seven.
2023-12-14T15:07:24Z
2023-12-22T05:22:10Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_Film_Critics_Circle_Awards_2023
75,563,797
Alvania campanii
Alvania campanii is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc or micromollusc in the family Rissoidae. The length of the shell attains 2.3 mm. This species occurs off the coast of Turkey.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alvania campanii is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc or micromollusc in the family Rissoidae.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The length of the shell attains 2.3 mm.", "title": "Description" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "This species occurs off the coast of Turkey.", "title": "Distribution" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
Alvania campanii is a species of minute sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc or micromollusc in the family Rissoidae.
2023-12-14T15:07:44Z
2023-12-14T15:07:44Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvania_campanii
75,563,815
Akin Olateru
Akinola Olateru is a Nigerian engineer. He the was commissioner of the Accident Investigation Bureau, Nigeria from 2017 to 2023. Olateru grew up in Ogbomoso, Osun State. He started his career as a maintenance engineer with Pan African Airlines and the Nigerian Police Air Wing. He has worked with British Midland Airways, KLM, and Martinair. He got his M.Sc. in Air Transport Management from City University of London in 2003. In January 2017, he was appointed by former president Muhammadu Buhari as the head of the Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB-Nigeria). He was reappointed in March 2021. He was removed by president Bola Ahmed Tinubu in December 2023. He is a Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, Royal Aeronautical Society, and Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport in the UK.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Akinola Olateru is a Nigerian engineer. He the was commissioner of the Accident Investigation Bureau, Nigeria from 2017 to 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Olateru grew up in Ogbomoso, Osun State. He started his career as a maintenance engineer with Pan African Airlines and the Nigerian Police Air Wing. He has worked with British Midland Airways, KLM, and Martinair.", "title": "Education and career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "He got his M.Sc. in Air Transport Management from City University of London in 2003.", "title": "Education and career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In January 2017, he was appointed by former president Muhammadu Buhari as the head of the Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB-Nigeria). He was reappointed in March 2021. He was removed by president Bola Ahmed Tinubu in December 2023.", "title": "Education and career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "He is a Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, Royal Aeronautical Society, and Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport in the UK.", "title": "Education and career" } ]
Akinola Olateru is a Nigerian engineer. He the was commissioner of the Accident Investigation Bureau, Nigeria from 2017 to 2023.
2023-12-14T15:10:31Z
2023-12-22T16:39:42Z
[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akin_Olateru
75,563,864
Vitillo
Vitillo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vitillo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vitillo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Matilde Vitillo, Italian female cyclist Robert J. Vitillo, American priest
2023-12-14T15:18:42Z
2023-12-14T15:18:42Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitillo
75,563,865
Alain Chartrand
Alain Chartrand (February 2, 1946 – December 11, 2023) was a Canadian film director and screenwriter. The son of prominent Quebec social activists Michel Chartrand and Simonne Monet-Chartrand, he was most noted for several film and television works about his parents, including the theatrical documentary films A Man of His Word (Un homme de parole) and My Life Is a River (Une vie comme rivière), and the television miniseries Chartrand et Simonne. He died on December 11, 2023, at the age of 77.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Alain Chartrand (February 2, 1946 – December 11, 2023) was a Canadian film director and screenwriter. The son of prominent Quebec social activists Michel Chartrand and Simonne Monet-Chartrand, he was most noted for several film and television works about his parents, including the theatrical documentary films A Man of His Word (Un homme de parole) and My Life Is a River (Une vie comme rivière), and the television miniseries Chartrand et Simonne.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "He died on December 11, 2023, at the age of 77.", "title": "" } ]
Alain Chartrand was a Canadian film director and screenwriter. The son of prominent Quebec social activists Michel Chartrand and Simonne Monet-Chartrand, he was most noted for several film and television works about his parents, including the theatrical documentary films A Man of His Word and My Life Is a River, and the television miniseries Chartrand et Simonne. He died on December 11, 2023, at the age of 77.
2023-12-14T15:18:43Z
2023-12-22T18:13:58Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alain_Chartrand
75,563,871
Vitiv
Vitiv is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vitiv is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vitiv is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Anatoliy Vitiv, Ukrainian politician Ihor Vitiv, Ukrainian footballer
2023-12-14T15:19:31Z
2023-12-14T15:19:31Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitiv
75,563,877
Vitković
Vitković is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vitković is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "title": "" } ]
Vitković is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Gavrilo Vitković (1829–1902), Serbian engineer Mihailo Vitković (1778–1829), Serbian poet Mladen Vitković, Serbian basketball player
2023-12-14T15:20:47Z
2023-12-14T15:20:47Z
[ "Template:Surname", "Template:Short pages monitor" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitkovi%C4%87
75,563,878
Aru Shiney-Ajay
Aru Shiney-Ajay (born 1997/1998) is an American climate activist and the executive director of the Sunrise Movement. She succeeded Varshini Prakash in September 2023 after serving as the organization's training director. She grew up in Minnesota to parents from southern India. After experiencing the 2018 Kerala floods, she interrupted her studies at Swarthmore College and started working for Sunrise as its training director full-time.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Aru Shiney-Ajay (born 1997/1998) is an American climate activist and the executive director of the Sunrise Movement. She succeeded Varshini Prakash in September 2023 after serving as the organization's training director.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She grew up in Minnesota to parents from southern India. After experiencing the 2018 Kerala floods, she interrupted her studies at Swarthmore College and started working for Sunrise as its training director full-time.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
Aru Shiney-Ajay is an American climate activist and the executive director of the Sunrise Movement. She succeeded Varshini Prakash in September 2023 after serving as the organization's training director. She grew up in Minnesota to parents from southern India. After experiencing the 2018 Kerala floods, she interrupted her studies at Swarthmore College and started working for Sunrise as its training director full-time.
2023-12-14T15:20:54Z
2023-12-16T17:53:14Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aru_Shiney-Ajay
75,563,886
Lyra B. Nickerson
Lyra Brown Nickerson (1886-1916) was an American philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest and most popular members of society in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. Her grandfather, Joseph R. Brown, formed a partnership with Lucian Sharpe in 1853, creating Brown & Sharpe. Brown & Sharpe was one of the best-known and most influential machine tool builders and was a leading manufacturer of instruments for machinists (such as micrometers and indicators). He left his interest in his company to his daughter, Lyra F. Brown, of his second wife, Jane Francis Brown. Lyra B. Nickerson was born on 7 December 1886 at her winter home, 71 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island. She was the only child of Edward I. Nickerson and Lyra F. Brown. Miss Nickerson's parents often travelled, and their daughter spent part of her early life visiting Europe with them. She had tutors at home, and she graduated the Lincoln School in 1904. Nickerson was concerned about the military and political disinterest in aeronautics in the United States. She donated funds to The American National Aeroplane Fund of the Aero Club of America. The purpose of The American National Aeroplane Fund was to train aviators, provide aviation corps for the National Guard and Navy Militia of the States, and put airplanes in use for the mail carrying service to inaccessible places, forming an aeronautical reserve, which while being used daily for peaceful purposes shall be ready for military service in case of need. In October 2015, she contributed $7500 to the funds of the Aero Club of America for an airplane. The Aero Club instituted a plan on developing an aviation corps for the naval militia or National Guard. At the suggestion of Nickerson, the Club gave the plane to the Rhode Island National Guard. Editorial (23 July 1916) Rhode Island, First to Provide It’s Naval Militia With Hyroaeroplane, Should Take Pride in Furnishing Proper Equipment for the Corps. To the Editor of the Sunday Journal, I had the pleasure of making a flight last Wednesday in Rhode Island’s new seaplane, which weighs 2150 pounds and is 48 feet and 8 inches spread. She has an eight-cylinder, 140 horse-power motor, which makes 2250 revolutions a minute, and has a speed of 80 miles an hour, her fuselage is made of steel. It is interesting to note that the Rhode Island Aeronautic Corps has the first seaplane of it’s kind under operation in the naval militia service, and has been given the No. 1. It is the only plane over which the Government at the present time has any control. There are some which have been sent on approval to Pensacola, but at present they have not been accepted. Rhode Island is the smallest State in the country, and has the distinction of owning the first seaplane. She should be patriotic enough to at least assist in the equipment of this corps of 28 picked men, who are enthusiastic enough to give their time and brains for the relatively small pay involved. The money subscribed in this State last winter will be barely sufficient to pay for the two hangars and the salaries of the mechanics and instructors required, after deducting the cost of the machines themselves. Some equipment, like ropes, buckles, gasoline tanks and the like, have been purchased, but more remains to be done before both detachments are completely outfitted. For example, the men of the corps are without rubber boots, and in launching the seaplane, or bringing it ashore, are nor wading out in ordinary clothes. The Rhode Island Legislature was asked last winter for an appropriation of $3000 to supplement the approximately $23,000 contributed by private citizens. This request, although made by the Governor and the Adjutant General, was refused. Shall we permit this important work to suffer in consequence of such neglect? These fine men have practically volunteered their services. Are there no sufficiently patriotic people here to assist in the maintenance of the Rhode Island Aeronautic Corps? LYRA BROWN NICKERSON Narragansett Pier, July 21. Nickerson inherited $6 million after the death of her parents and became noted as a philanthropist. She donated her father's architectural library to the Providence Public Library, where it now forms the core of the Nickerson Art and Architecture Collection. There were 700 volumes in the collection. On 1 June 1908, she gave $10,000 to the Providence Public Library, declaring that her action was aimed to carry out the expressed wishes of her father. This was followed by financial gifts to both the library and the Rhode Island School of Design. Upon her death, her remaining estate was divided between the Providence Public Library and the Rhode Island School of Design. The latter bequest included several pieces of artwork, including two portraits of her father. The earlier of these was painted in 1885 by Gerald Sinclair Hayward. The latter is part of a pair of portraits posthumously commissioned in 1909 by Nickerson of her parents from Albert Edward Jackson. Nickerson inherited her grandfather's wealth at 20 years of age when her mother died on 13 July 1907. Her father died less than a year later, 15 March 1908. She continued to travel frequently after her parent's death. She was in Germany when World War I started and had difficulty returning to the United States. On 3 August 1916, Nickerson announced her engagement to Henry G. Clark, assistant director of Athletics at Brown University; the date for the wedding was set as 4 October 1916. On 30 August 1916, Nickerson died of typhoid at her summer home at Narragansett Pier. At the time of her death, Henry G. Clark (fiancé), Jane Brown Jones (cousin), Dr. Lord of Boston, Dr. Charles Hitchcock of New York and Narragansett Pier, two nurses, and William H. Buffum were present. Her secretary, Kathryn Cocroft, was also there. Dr. Hitchcock believed Nickerson caught typhoid during an automobile trip through New England.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Lyra Brown Nickerson (1886-1916) was an American philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest and most popular members of society in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. Her grandfather, Joseph R. Brown, formed a partnership with Lucian Sharpe in 1853, creating Brown & Sharpe. Brown & Sharpe was one of the best-known and most influential machine tool builders and was a leading manufacturer of instruments for machinists (such as micrometers and indicators). He left his interest in his company to his daughter, Lyra F. Brown, of his second wife, Jane Francis Brown.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Lyra B. Nickerson was born on 7 December 1886 at her winter home, 71 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Island. She was the only child of Edward I. Nickerson and Lyra F. Brown. Miss Nickerson's parents often travelled, and their daughter spent part of her early life visiting Europe with them. She had tutors at home, and she graduated the Lincoln School in 1904.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Nickerson was concerned about the military and political disinterest in aeronautics in the United States. She donated funds to The American National Aeroplane Fund of the Aero Club of America. The purpose of The American National Aeroplane Fund was to train aviators, provide aviation corps for the National Guard and Navy Militia of the States, and put airplanes in use for the mail carrying service to inaccessible places, forming an aeronautical reserve, which while being used daily for peaceful purposes shall be ready for military service in case of need. In October 2015, she contributed $7500 to the funds of the Aero Club of America for an airplane. The Aero Club instituted a plan on developing an aviation corps for the naval militia or National Guard. At the suggestion of Nickerson, the Club gave the plane to the Rhode Island National Guard.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Editorial (23 July 1916)", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Rhode Island, First to Provide It’s Naval Militia With Hyroaeroplane, Should Take Pride in Furnishing Proper Equipment for the Corps.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "To the Editor of the Sunday Journal,", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "I had the pleasure of making a flight last Wednesday in Rhode Island’s new seaplane, which weighs 2150 pounds and is 48 feet and 8 inches spread. She has an eight-cylinder, 140 horse-power motor, which makes 2250 revolutions a minute, and has a speed of 80 miles an hour, her fuselage is made of steel.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "It is interesting to note that the Rhode Island Aeronautic Corps has the first seaplane of it’s kind under operation in the naval militia service, and has been given the No. 1. It is the only plane over which the Government at the present time has any control. There are some which have been sent on approval to Pensacola, but at present they have not been accepted.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Rhode Island is the smallest State in the country, and has the distinction of owning the first seaplane. She should be patriotic enough to at least assist in the equipment of this corps of 28 picked men, who are enthusiastic enough to give their time and brains for the relatively small pay involved.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "The money subscribed in this State last winter will be barely sufficient to pay for the two hangars and the salaries of the mechanics and instructors required, after deducting the cost of the machines themselves. Some equipment, like ropes, buckles, gasoline tanks and the like, have been purchased, but more remains to be done before both detachments are completely outfitted. For example, the men of the corps are without rubber boots, and in launching the seaplane, or bringing it ashore, are nor wading out in ordinary clothes.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "The Rhode Island Legislature was asked last winter for an appropriation of $3000 to supplement the approximately $23,000 contributed by private citizens. This request, although made by the Governor and the Adjutant General, was refused. Shall we permit this important work to suffer in consequence of such neglect?", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "These fine men have practically volunteered their services. Are there no sufficiently patriotic people here to assist in the maintenance of the Rhode Island Aeronautic Corps?", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "LYRA BROWN NICKERSON", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 13, "text": "Narragansett Pier, July 21.", "title": "Military aviation" }, { "paragraph_id": 14, "text": "Nickerson inherited $6 million after the death of her parents and became noted as a philanthropist. She donated her father's architectural library to the Providence Public Library, where it now forms the core of the Nickerson Art and Architecture Collection. There were 700 volumes in the collection. On 1 June 1908, she gave $10,000 to the Providence Public Library, declaring that her action was aimed to carry out the expressed wishes of her father.", "title": "Philanthropy" }, { "paragraph_id": 15, "text": "This was followed by financial gifts to both the library and the Rhode Island School of Design. Upon her death, her remaining estate was divided between the Providence Public Library and the Rhode Island School of Design. The latter bequest included several pieces of artwork, including two portraits of her father. The earlier of these was painted in 1885 by Gerald Sinclair Hayward. The latter is part of a pair of portraits posthumously commissioned in 1909 by Nickerson of her parents from Albert Edward Jackson.", "title": "Philanthropy" }, { "paragraph_id": 16, "text": "Nickerson inherited her grandfather's wealth at 20 years of age when her mother died on 13 July 1907. Her father died less than a year later, 15 March 1908. She continued to travel frequently after her parent's death. She was in Germany when World War I started and had difficulty returning to the United States.", "title": "Personal life" }, { "paragraph_id": 17, "text": "On 3 August 1916, Nickerson announced her engagement to Henry G. Clark, assistant director of Athletics at Brown University; the date for the wedding was set as 4 October 1916.", "title": "Personal life" }, { "paragraph_id": 18, "text": "On 30 August 1916, Nickerson died of typhoid at her summer home at Narragansett Pier. At the time of her death, Henry G. Clark (fiancé), Jane Brown Jones (cousin), Dr. Lord of Boston, Dr. Charles Hitchcock of New York and Narragansett Pier, two nurses, and William H. Buffum were present. Her secretary, Kathryn Cocroft, was also there. Dr. Hitchcock believed Nickerson caught typhoid during an automobile trip through New England.", "title": "Death" } ]
Lyra Brown Nickerson (1886-1916) was an American philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest and most popular members of society in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. Her grandfather, Joseph R. Brown, formed a partnership with Lucian Sharpe in 1853, creating Brown & Sharpe. Brown & Sharpe was one of the best-known and most influential machine tool builders and was a leading manufacturer of instruments for machinists. He left his interest in his company to his daughter, Lyra F. Brown, of his second wife, Jane Francis Brown.
2023-12-14T15:22:32Z
2023-12-26T16:39:38Z
[ "Template:Multiple issues", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite news" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyra_B._Nickerson
75,563,891
Mau–Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Express
The Mau—Lokmanya Tilak Terminus is an express train in the north eastern zone of India that runs between Mau Junction and Lokmanya Tilak Terminus. It is currently being operated with 15181/15182 train numbers on a weekly basis.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Mau—Lokmanya Tilak Terminus is an express train in the north eastern zone of India that runs between Mau Junction and Lokmanya Tilak Terminus. It is currently being operated with 15181/15182 train numbers on a weekly basis.", "title": "" } ]
The Mau—Lokmanya Tilak Terminus is an express train in the north eastern zone of India that runs between Mau Junction and Lokmanya Tilak Terminus. It is currently being operated with 15181/15182 train numbers on a weekly basis.
2023-12-14T15:23:18Z
2023-12-29T01:07:45Z
[ "Template:Orphan", "Template:Drafts moved from mainspace" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mau%E2%80%93Lokmanya_Tilak_Terminus_Express
75,563,899
Susanna and the Elders (Artemisia Gentileschi, London)
Susanna and the Elders is a painting by the Italian artist Artemisia Gentileschi. It is one of many paintings executed by Gentileschi on the theme of Susanna being approached by two men while she is washing. The painting was completed in 1639 while Gentileschi was living in London, commissioned by Queen Henrietta Maria. The painting was rediscovered as being by Gentileschi after research and restoration in the 2020s. It is part of the British Royal Collection.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Susanna and the Elders is a painting by the Italian artist Artemisia Gentileschi. It is one of many paintings executed by Gentileschi on the theme of Susanna being approached by two men while she is washing. The painting was completed in 1639 while Gentileschi was living in London, commissioned by Queen Henrietta Maria.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The painting was rediscovered as being by Gentileschi after research and restoration in the 2020s. It is part of the British Royal Collection.", "title": "" } ]
Susanna and the Elders is a painting by the Italian artist Artemisia Gentileschi. It is one of many paintings executed by Gentileschi on the theme of Susanna being approached by two men while she is washing. The painting was completed in 1639 while Gentileschi was living in London, commissioned by Queen Henrietta Maria. The painting was rediscovered as being by Gentileschi after research and restoration in the 2020s. It is part of the British Royal Collection.
2023-12-14T15:24:50Z
2023-12-14T15:40:46Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_and_the_Elders_(Artemisia_Gentileschi,_London)
75,563,901
Atilio Aguirre
Antonio Atilio Aguirre (died before March 2003) was a Bolivian football player. He was part of Bolivia's squad that won the 1963 South American Championship on home soil. He was part of Bolivia's squad for the 1959 South American Championship in Argentina. Aguirre played 4 games in the tournament, against Uruguay, Argentina, Chile and Peru as Bolivia finished last of the tournament. He was again in Bolivia's squad for the 1963 South American Championship held on home soil. He only played one game in the tournament, against Colombia national football team, as Bolivia won the competition, its only title to date.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Antonio Atilio Aguirre (died before March 2003) was a Bolivian football player. He was part of Bolivia's squad that won the 1963 South American Championship on home soil.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "He was part of Bolivia's squad for the 1959 South American Championship in Argentina.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Aguirre played 4 games in the tournament, against Uruguay, Argentina, Chile and Peru as Bolivia finished last of the tournament.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "He was again in Bolivia's squad for the 1963 South American Championship held on home soil.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "He only played one game in the tournament, against Colombia national football team, as Bolivia won the competition, its only title to date.", "title": "International career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
Antonio Atilio Aguirre was a Bolivian football player. He was part of Bolivia's squad that won the 1963 South American Championship on home soil.
2023-12-14T15:25:11Z
2023-12-26T23:21:58Z
[ "Template:Use dmy dates", "Template:Infobox football biography", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Short description" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atilio_Aguirre
75,563,926
AAR2
AAR2 is a gene that encodes a protein essential for pre-mRNA splicing, a step in post-transcriptional modification of RNA. The AAR2 protein is part of the U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (snRNP), and it plays a role in a component of the spliceosome. In humans, the AAR2 gene is on chromosme 20.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "AAR2 is a gene that encodes a protein essential for pre-mRNA splicing, a step in post-transcriptional modification of RNA. The AAR2 protein is part of the U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (snRNP), and it plays a role in a component of the spliceosome. In humans, the AAR2 gene is on chromosme 20.", "title": "" } ]
AAR2 is a gene that encodes a protein essential for pre-mRNA splicing, a step in post-transcriptional modification of RNA. The AAR2 protein is part of the U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (snRNP), and it plays a role in a component of the spliceosome. In humans, the AAR2 gene is on chromosme 20.
2023-12-14T15:30:55Z
2023-12-15T13:40:25Z
[ "Template:Gene-20-stub", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AAR2
75,563,935
NJWMX
NJWMX is the first remix album by South Korean girl group NewJeans. It was released on December 19, 2023, through ADOR. It features six remixed versions of songs from the group's first two projects, New Jeans and OMG, as well as their respective instrumental versions. Pitchfork included NJWMX in its weekly list of the best new albums, highlighting the remixed bluegrass version of "Hurt" as a standout.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "NJWMX is the first remix album by South Korean girl group NewJeans. It was released on December 19, 2023, through ADOR. It features six remixed versions of songs from the group's first two projects, New Jeans and OMG, as well as their respective instrumental versions. Pitchfork included NJWMX in its weekly list of the best new albums, highlighting the remixed bluegrass version of \"Hurt\" as a standout.", "title": "" } ]
NJWMX is the first remix album by South Korean girl group NewJeans. It was released on December 19, 2023, through ADOR. It features six remixed versions of songs from the group's first two projects, New Jeans and OMG, as well as their respective instrumental versions. Pitchfork included NJWMX in its weekly list of the best new albums, highlighting the remixed bluegrass version of "Hurt" as a standout.
2023-12-14T15:32:20Z
2023-12-27T04:48:29Z
[ "Template:Infobox album", "Template:Track listing", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite news", "Template:NewJeans", "Template:Authority control" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NJWMX
75,563,948
2023–24 PEC Zwolle season
The 2023–24 season is PEC Zwolle's 114th season in existence and first one back in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Win Draw Loss Fixtures Last updated: 9 December 2023 Source: Soccerway Last updated: 9 December 2023. Source: The league fixtures were unveiled on 30 June 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2023–24 season is PEC Zwolle's 114th season in existence and first one back in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "title": "Players" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Win Draw Loss Fixtures", "title": "Pre-season and friendlies" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Last updated: 9 December 2023 Source: Soccerway", "title": "Competitions" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Last updated: 9 December 2023. Source:", "title": "Competitions" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The league fixtures were unveiled on 30 June 2023.", "title": "Competitions" } ]
The 2023–24 season is PEC Zwolle's 114th season in existence and first one back in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup.
2023-12-14T15:35:04Z
2023-12-14T15:35:04Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324_PEC_Zwolle_season
75,563,967
Oprah Winfrey (painting)
A oil painting of Oprah Winfrey by Shawn Michael Warren was unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. in 2023. The painting depicts a smiling Winfrey in a voluminous purple taffeta dress by Christian Siriano, its color referring to her first film role in Steven Spielberg's 1985 version of The Color Purple. Winfrey is depicted walking across a grass lawn amid the oak trees of the verdant prayer garden at her estate in Montecito, California, holding an olive branch in her left hand. The artist received the commission after painting a mural of Winfrey in the West Loop neighborhood of Chicago in 2020, near where Winfrey's Harpo Studios had been located until 2015. The full-length portrait measures approximately 70 in × 56 in (180 cm × 140 cm). It has been added to the permanent collection of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "A oil painting of Oprah Winfrey by Shawn Michael Warren was unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. in 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The painting depicts a smiling Winfrey in a voluminous purple taffeta dress by Christian Siriano, its color referring to her first film role in Steven Spielberg's 1985 version of The Color Purple. Winfrey is depicted walking across a grass lawn amid the oak trees of the verdant prayer garden at her estate in Montecito, California, holding an olive branch in her left hand.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The artist received the commission after painting a mural of Winfrey in the West Loop neighborhood of Chicago in 2020, near where Winfrey's Harpo Studios had been located until 2015. The full-length portrait measures approximately 70 in × 56 in (180 cm × 140 cm). It has been added to the permanent collection of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery.", "title": "" } ]
A oil painting of Oprah Winfrey by Shawn Michael Warren was unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. in 2023. The painting depicts a smiling Winfrey in a voluminous purple taffeta dress by Christian Siriano, its color referring to her first film role in Steven Spielberg's 1985 version of The Color Purple. Winfrey is depicted walking across a grass lawn amid the oak trees of the verdant prayer garden at her estate in Montecito, California, holding an olive branch in her left hand. The artist received the commission after painting a mural of Winfrey in the West Loop neighborhood of Chicago in 2020, near where Winfrey's Harpo Studios had been located until 2015. The full-length portrait measures approximately 70 in × 56 in. It has been added to the permanent collection of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery.
2023-12-14T15:38:41Z
2023-12-18T16:46:13Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oprah_Winfrey_(painting)
75,563,972
Grippina
Grippina is a genus of bivalves in the family Spheniopsidae which currently consists of nine species. It was first described by William Dall in 1912 with G. californica recorded in the eastern Pacific Ocean near California, US. Their habitat spans across the Pacific Ocean, mainly centering around Australia and New Zealand, though G. coronata was found in 2015 off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in the western Atlantic Ocean. Bivalves in the genus Grippina are part of the order Anomalodesmata, also known as septibranchs, which are carnivorous clams. They use their inhalant siphons, adapted with sensory papillae (sometimes cited as tentacles) to detect motion, to inhale microscopic crustaceans such as ostracods. As sessile, benthic predators, they lie in wait under sand and stick their siphons out into open water to feed. Their shells range in size from about 2–5 millimeters.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Grippina is a genus of bivalves in the family Spheniopsidae which currently consists of nine species. It was first described by William Dall in 1912 with G. californica recorded in the eastern Pacific Ocean near California, US. Their habitat spans across the Pacific Ocean, mainly centering around Australia and New Zealand, though G. coronata was found in 2015 off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in the western Atlantic Ocean. Bivalves in the genus Grippina are part of the order Anomalodesmata, also known as septibranchs, which are carnivorous clams. They use their inhalant siphons, adapted with sensory papillae (sometimes cited as tentacles) to detect motion, to inhale microscopic crustaceans such as ostracods. As sessile, benthic predators, they lie in wait under sand and stick their siphons out into open water to feed. Their shells range in size from about 2–5 millimeters.", "title": "" } ]
Grippina is a genus of bivalves in the family Spheniopsidae which currently consists of nine species. It was first described by William Dall in 1912 with G. californica recorded in the eastern Pacific Ocean near California, US. Their habitat spans across the Pacific Ocean, mainly centering around Australia and New Zealand, though G. coronata was found in 2015 off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in the western Atlantic Ocean. Bivalves in the genus Grippina are part of the order Anomalodesmata, also known as septibranchs, which are carnivorous clams. They use their inhalant siphons, adapted with sensory papillae to detect motion, to inhale microscopic crustaceans such as ostracods. As sessile, benthic predators, they lie in wait under sand and stick their siphons out into open water to feed. Their shells range in size from about 2–5 millimeters.
2023-12-14T15:39:14Z
2023-12-25T04:52:16Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grippina
75,563,973
Malta women's national volleyball team
The Malta women's national volleyball team (Maltese: Tim nazzjonali volleyball tan-nisa ta 'Malta) represents Malta in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches. The team is run and managed by the Maltese Volleyball Association, which is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV). The Maltese team also follow two regional European volleyball bodies, the Balkan Volleyball Association (BVA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA). The Maltese women's national volleyball team has not managed to qualify for any major international volleyball events throughout its history, like the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, Olympic Games, or European Championship. They often participate in regional competitions such as the Small Countries Division Championship and the Balkan Championship.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Malta women's national volleyball team (Maltese: Tim nazzjonali volleyball tan-nisa ta 'Malta) represents Malta in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches. The team is run and managed by the Maltese Volleyball Association, which is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV). The Maltese team also follow two regional European volleyball bodies, the Balkan Volleyball Association (BVA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The Maltese women's national volleyball team has not managed to qualify for any major international volleyball events throughout its history, like the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, Olympic Games, or European Championship. They often participate in regional competitions such as the Small Countries Division Championship and the Balkan Championship.", "title": "Team history" } ]
The Malta women's national volleyball team represents Malta in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches. The team is run and managed by the Maltese Volleyball Association, which is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV). The Maltese team also follow two regional European volleyball bodies, the Balkan Volleyball Association (BVA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA).
2023-12-14T15:39:20Z
2023-12-17T17:46:15Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malta_women%27s_national_volleyball_team
75,564,018
2023–24 Go Ahead Eagles season
The 2023–24 season is Go Ahead Eagles's 121st season in existence and third consecutive in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Win Draw Loss Fixtures Last updated: December 2023 Source: Soccerway Last updated: December 2023. Source: The league fixtures were unveiled on 30 June 2023.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2023–24 season is Go Ahead Eagles's 121st season in existence and third consecutive in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "title": "Players" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "title": "Players" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Win Draw Loss Fixtures", "title": "Pre-season and friendlies" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Last updated: December 2023 Source: Soccerway", "title": "Competitions" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Last updated: December 2023. Source:", "title": "Competitions" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "The league fixtures were unveiled on 30 June 2023.", "title": "Competitions" } ]
The 2023–24 season is Go Ahead Eagles's 121st season in existence and third consecutive in the Dutch top division Eredivisie. They are also competing in the KNVB Cup.
2023-12-14T15:47:40Z
2023-12-20T04:07:01Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324_Go_Ahead_Eagles_season
75,564,048
Ice hockey in Vermont
Vermont has a long history with ice hockey in the United States. Despite the state's sparse population, its location in New England placed Vermont in the middle of ice hockey circles, particularly at the college level. The close proximity to Canada afforded Vermont with a very close view of ice hockey as far back as the 19th century. Several local clubs were arranged but nothing formal occurred until 1909. One of those amateur teams was put together by a group of students at Norwich University. After garnering some interest from the student body, the school gave its blessing to the program and the first sanctioned team in Vermont hit the ice the following year. Unfortunately, a lack of facilities left the Cadets scrambling to find available ice and eventually forced the program to be suspended in 1913. After World War I, ice hockey returned to the state when Middlebury began its men's program. They were joined that season by Saint Michael's which, aside from cutting down on travel costs, provided each with a local rival. With an increasing number of rinks in the state, Norwich was able to secure a home venue and return in 1925. That same year, the state's flagship university, Vermont also hit the ice, giving the state a solid foundation with the sport. However, after the great depression the cost of business became too much. During the 1930s, Norwich, Vermont and Saint Michael's were each forced to suspend operations. Only Middlebury was able to carry on through the difficulties. Eventually the financial situation improved and Norwich returned to the ice by the end of the 30s. Just as the others were considering revivals of their own, World War II broke out and all programs were mothballed in the early 40s. Once the war had ended, Middlebury and Norwich restarted in short order with Saint Michael's making an abortive attempt in the 50s. The Catamounts, however, did not get back onto the ice until the 1960s. Despite the long wait, the team was very successful in its return, winning three league championships over a 5-year span. Vermont promoted its program to the top division in 1974 and has remained there ever since, albeit with less success. In the meantime, Middlebury flited with a championship in the late 1970s, however, because the school was a member of NESCAC, they were forbidden from playing in national tournaments. Despite that barrier, ice hockey in Vermont was flourishing in the late 70s and eventually the granite state became a foursome once more when Saint Michael's was able to bring its team back in 1982. In the mid-90s, the NESCAC changed its rules and finally allowed its member school to participate in national tournaments. Within a year, Middlebury won its first championship and proceeded to win the next four as well. The Panthers became the first team in college hockey history to win five consecutive championships. Spurred on by their long-time rival, Norwich was able to win its first championship in 2000, ending Middlebury's run. In the first decade of the 21st century, five additional Division III national titles were won by Middlebury and Norwich, making the state the center of D-III ice hockey. The success of the men's programs led to increased interest from other quarters. Middlebury was the first Division II or III college to found a women's team, playing its inaugural season in 1981. The other Vermont schools were slower on the uptake but by 2006 each of them was sporting a women's program as well. With so much college hockey going on in the state, eventually the sport spilled over into different branches. Vermont high schools had long sported varsity programs but the state did not receive its first formal junior team until 2000. The Green Mountain Glades were members of the Eastern Junior Hockey League, a Tier III league, and survived for over a decade before relocating to Maine. Two years after their departure, a second low-level junior team arrived. The Vermont Lumberjacks continued to call the state home, as of 2023, and have been relatively successful on the ice. In terms of professional hockey, Vermont has seen very little interest. With the state's most populous city being Burlington at just north of 44,000 residents (ranked 870th in the nation in 2020), Vermont just doesn't have enough people to support a pro team. To date, only one attempt was made and it proved to be rather disastrous; the Vermont Wild played during the fall of 2011. At the start the team performed about as well as could be expected for an expansion team but their attendance figures were woeful. Playing out of the 1,000-seat Green Mountain Arena, the Wild only could get about 1/4 of the venue filled. The showing was so dismal that the team only played 10 of their scheduled 53 games before folding. Active Active (out of state) Vermont has a very high level of engagement with ice hockey. In 2022, 0.663% of the population was registered with USA Hockey, or about 1 in every 150 people. That was good enough for 4th in the nation, ahead of traditional hotbeds like Massachusetts and Michigan. With the state's low overall population that only translates to approximately 4,000 people, however, that hasn't stopped several Vermont natives from making a name in the sport. † relocated from elsewhere.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Vermont has a long history with ice hockey in the United States. Despite the state's sparse population, its location in New England placed Vermont in the middle of ice hockey circles, particularly at the college level.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The close proximity to Canada afforded Vermont with a very close view of ice hockey as far back as the 19th century. Several local clubs were arranged but nothing formal occurred until 1909. One of those amateur teams was put together by a group of students at Norwich University. After garnering some interest from the student body, the school gave its blessing to the program and the first sanctioned team in Vermont hit the ice the following year. Unfortunately, a lack of facilities left the Cadets scrambling to find available ice and eventually forced the program to be suspended in 1913. After World War I, ice hockey returned to the state when Middlebury began its men's program. They were joined that season by Saint Michael's which, aside from cutting down on travel costs, provided each with a local rival. With an increasing number of rinks in the state, Norwich was able to secure a home venue and return in 1925. That same year, the state's flagship university, Vermont also hit the ice, giving the state a solid foundation with the sport. However, after the great depression the cost of business became too much. During the 1930s, Norwich, Vermont and Saint Michael's were each forced to suspend operations. Only Middlebury was able to carry on through the difficulties.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Eventually the financial situation improved and Norwich returned to the ice by the end of the 30s. Just as the others were considering revivals of their own, World War II broke out and all programs were mothballed in the early 40s. Once the war had ended, Middlebury and Norwich restarted in short order with Saint Michael's making an abortive attempt in the 50s. The Catamounts, however, did not get back onto the ice until the 1960s. Despite the long wait, the team was very successful in its return, winning three league championships over a 5-year span. Vermont promoted its program to the top division in 1974 and has remained there ever since, albeit with less success. In the meantime, Middlebury flited with a championship in the late 1970s, however, because the school was a member of NESCAC, they were forbidden from playing in national tournaments. Despite that barrier, ice hockey in Vermont was flourishing in the late 70s and eventually the granite state became a foursome once more when Saint Michael's was able to bring its team back in 1982.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In the mid-90s, the NESCAC changed its rules and finally allowed its member school to participate in national tournaments. Within a year, Middlebury won its first championship and proceeded to win the next four as well. The Panthers became the first team in college hockey history to win five consecutive championships. Spurred on by their long-time rival, Norwich was able to win its first championship in 2000, ending Middlebury's run. In the first decade of the 21st century, five additional Division III national titles were won by Middlebury and Norwich, making the state the center of D-III ice hockey.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The success of the men's programs led to increased interest from other quarters. Middlebury was the first Division II or III college to found a women's team, playing its inaugural season in 1981. The other Vermont schools were slower on the uptake but by 2006 each of them was sporting a women's program as well. With so much college hockey going on in the state, eventually the sport spilled over into different branches. Vermont high schools had long sported varsity programs but the state did not receive its first formal junior team until 2000. The Green Mountain Glades were members of the Eastern Junior Hockey League, a Tier III league, and survived for over a decade before relocating to Maine. Two years after their departure, a second low-level junior team arrived. The Vermont Lumberjacks continued to call the state home, as of 2023, and have been relatively successful on the ice.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In terms of professional hockey, Vermont has seen very little interest. With the state's most populous city being Burlington at just north of 44,000 residents (ranked 870th in the nation in 2020), Vermont just doesn't have enough people to support a pro team. To date, only one attempt was made and it proved to be rather disastrous; the Vermont Wild played during the fall of 2011. At the start the team performed about as well as could be expected for an expansion team but their attendance figures were woeful. Playing out of the 1,000-seat Green Mountain Arena, the Wild only could get about 1/4 of the venue filled. The showing was so dismal that the team only played 10 of their scheduled 53 games before folding.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Active Active (out of state)", "title": "Teams" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Vermont has a very high level of engagement with ice hockey. In 2022, 0.663% of the population was registered with USA Hockey, or about 1 in every 150 people. That was good enough for 4th in the nation, ahead of traditional hotbeds like Massachusetts and Michigan. With the state's low overall population that only translates to approximately 4,000 people, however, that hasn't stopped several Vermont natives from making a name in the sport.", "title": "Players" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "† relocated from elsewhere.", "title": "Players" } ]
Vermont has a long history with ice hockey in the United States. Despite the state's sparse population, its location in New England placed Vermont in the middle of ice hockey circles, particularly at the college level.
2023-12-14T15:51:53Z
2023-12-31T06:23:26Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_hockey_in_Vermont
75,564,067
Hasan Bitmez
Hasan Bitmez (15 December 1969 – 14 December 2023) was a Turkish politician who was a member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey for the Felicity Party. Born in the town of Alucra on 15 December 1969, Bitmez attended Gebze Imam-Hatip High School in Istanbul, and went to college at Al-Azhar University. He was married and had one child. On 12 December 2023, Bitmez collapsed from a heart attack in parliament, moments after finishing a speech denouncing Israel in the context of the 2023 Israel–Hamas war, saying that Israel “will suffer the wrath of Allah,” and criticizing the ongoing relationship between Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party and Israel. He died at Ankara Bilkent City Hospital two days later, on 14 December at the age of 53, one day before his 54th birthday. He was buried at Merkezefendi Cemetery in Istanbul. Bitmez is the fourth MP in the history of Turkey to have died during or after an event that took place in the Assembly, following Halid Karsıalan, Mehmet Abdurrezak Ceylan, and Mehmet Fevzi Şıhanlıoğlu. Following his death, the Felicity and Future Alliance failed to maintain the 20-deputy quota to unify, and it subsequently fell apart.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Hasan Bitmez (15 December 1969 – 14 December 2023) was a Turkish politician who was a member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey for the Felicity Party.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Born in the town of Alucra on 15 December 1969, Bitmez attended Gebze Imam-Hatip High School in Istanbul, and went to college at Al-Azhar University. He was married and had one child.", "title": "Personal life and death" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "On 12 December 2023, Bitmez collapsed from a heart attack in parliament, moments after finishing a speech denouncing Israel in the context of the 2023 Israel–Hamas war, saying that Israel “will suffer the wrath of Allah,” and criticizing the ongoing relationship between Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party and Israel. He died at Ankara Bilkent City Hospital two days later, on 14 December at the age of 53, one day before his 54th birthday. He was buried at Merkezefendi Cemetery in Istanbul.", "title": "Personal life and death" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Bitmez is the fourth MP in the history of Turkey to have died during or after an event that took place in the Assembly, following Halid Karsıalan, Mehmet Abdurrezak Ceylan, and Mehmet Fevzi Şıhanlıoğlu. Following his death, the Felicity and Future Alliance failed to maintain the 20-deputy quota to unify, and it subsequently fell apart.", "title": "Personal life and death" } ]
Hasan Bitmez was a Turkish politician who was a member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey for the Felicity Party.
2023-12-14T15:54:37Z
2023-12-28T19:43:38Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasan_Bitmez
75,564,070
Empire National Bank Building
Empire National Bank Building is a historic building located in the downtown of Clarksburg, West Virginia. Designed by Ernest C. S. Holmboe of Holmboe & Lafferty the largest architecture firm in the area at the time. The building is a contributing property of the Clarksburg Downtown Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. The building has a resemblance to the flat iron building in New York, the current tenant, MVB Bank, has a large picture of the Flat iron building in New York at night. Commissioned in 1907 by Virgil Highland, president of the Empire National Bank, this seven-story Clarksburg landmark navigates intersecting streets with a dramatic trapezoidal form. Rusticated brownstone anchors the base, while warm brick ascends to an emphatic cornice adorned with oversized brackets. Dual entrances, each graced with white terra-cotta Corinthian frontispieces topped by female busts, add elegance. A surprising departure from its architects' usual conservative style, this exuberant Renaissance Revival design stands as a testament to Highland's vision and a significant addition to the Clarksburg skyline. The interior retains significant elements of its early 1900s bank heritage, including an original spiral staircase and intricate lobby details. The building's 25,000 square feet encompass numerous offices and storage rooms, alongside dedicated spaces for relaxation (lounges), intellectual pursuits (libraries), and collaborative endeavors (conference rooms). On August 25, 2023, the building went up for auction. It sold for $231,000 to an online investor who asked to remain anonymous. Future plans for the structure are unknown at this time.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Empire National Bank Building is a historic building located in the downtown of Clarksburg, West Virginia. Designed by Ernest C. S. Holmboe of Holmboe & Lafferty the largest architecture firm in the area at the time. The building is a contributing property of the Clarksburg Downtown Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. The building has a resemblance to the flat iron building in New York, the current tenant, MVB Bank, has a large picture of the Flat iron building in New York at night.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Commissioned in 1907 by Virgil Highland, president of the Empire National Bank, this seven-story Clarksburg landmark navigates intersecting streets with a dramatic trapezoidal form. Rusticated brownstone anchors the base, while warm brick ascends to an emphatic cornice adorned with oversized brackets. Dual entrances, each graced with white terra-cotta Corinthian frontispieces topped by female busts, add elegance. A surprising departure from its architects' usual conservative style, this exuberant Renaissance Revival design stands as a testament to Highland's vision and a significant addition to the Clarksburg skyline.", "title": "Design" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The interior retains significant elements of its early 1900s bank heritage, including an original spiral staircase and intricate lobby details. The building's 25,000 square feet encompass numerous offices and storage rooms, alongside dedicated spaces for relaxation (lounges), intellectual pursuits (libraries), and collaborative endeavors (conference rooms).", "title": "Design" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "On August 25, 2023, the building went up for auction. It sold for $231,000 to an online investor who asked to remain anonymous. Future plans for the structure are unknown at this time.", "title": "2023 Sale" } ]
Empire National Bank Building is a historic building located in the downtown of Clarksburg, West Virginia. Designed by Ernest C. S. Holmboe of Holmboe & Lafferty the largest architecture firm in the area at the time. The building is a contributing property of the Clarksburg Downtown Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. The building has a resemblance to the flat iron building in New York, the current tenant, MVB Bank, has a large picture of the Flat iron building in New York at night.
2023-12-14T15:54:54Z
2023-12-26T08:02:16Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_National_Bank_Building
75,564,076
Chu Lanlan
Chu Lanlan (1982 – 30 December 2022,) was a Chinese opera singer. Chu made her singing debut on television in 1990, when she was eight years old. She studied at the Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Opera. Possessing a soprano range, chu specialized in Peking Opera. She created the song and dance "Farewell My Concubine" for the Peking Opera. She sang during the 2008 Summer Olympics. Chu had also worked on projects on public welfare. Her last performance was in early November 2022 in which she was accompanied by her son. In December 2022, Chu died from the complications of COVID-19.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Chu Lanlan (1982 – 30 December 2022,) was a Chinese opera singer.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Chu made her singing debut on television in 1990, when she was eight years old. She studied at the Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Opera. Possessing a soprano range, chu specialized in Peking Opera. She created the song and dance \"Farewell My Concubine\" for the Peking Opera. She sang during the 2008 Summer Olympics.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Chu had also worked on projects on public welfare. Her last performance was in early November 2022 in which she was accompanied by her son. In December 2022, Chu died from the complications of COVID-19.", "title": "" } ]
Chu Lanlan was a Chinese opera singer. Chu made her singing debut on television in 1990, when she was eight years old. She studied at the Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Opera. Possessing a soprano range, chu specialized in Peking Opera. She created the song and dance "Farewell My Concubine" for the Peking Opera. She sang during the 2008 Summer Olympics. Chu had also worked on projects on public welfare. Her last performance was in early November 2022 in which she was accompanied by her son. In December 2022, Chu died from the complications of COVID-19.
2023-12-14T15:55:42Z
2023-12-15T00:30:39Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chu_Lanlan
75,564,084
Lizette Emma Orth
Lizette Emma Orth (July 6, 1858 – September 14, 1913) was an American pianist and composer. She was born Lizette Emma Blood on July 6, 1858 in Milford, New Hampshire, the daughter of James Blood and Emeline Wheeler Blood, an accomplished amateur musician. She began studying piano at age ten. In 1877, she began studying under pianist John Orth in Boston and they married in 1883. Orth composed numerous piano pieces for children and two children's operas, Mother Goose's Jubilee (1901) and The Song of the Sea-shell (1903).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Lizette Emma Orth (July 6, 1858 – September 14, 1913) was an American pianist and composer.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "She was born Lizette Emma Blood on July 6, 1858 in Milford, New Hampshire, the daughter of James Blood and Emeline Wheeler Blood, an accomplished amateur musician. She began studying piano at age ten. In 1877, she began studying under pianist John Orth in Boston and they married in 1883.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Orth composed numerous piano pieces for children and two children's operas, Mother Goose's Jubilee (1901) and The Song of the Sea-shell (1903).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "", "title": "References" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "", "title": "References" } ]
Lizette Emma Orth was an American pianist and composer. She was born Lizette Emma Blood on July 6, 1858 in Milford, New Hampshire, the daughter of James Blood and Emeline Wheeler Blood, an accomplished amateur musician. She began studying piano at age ten. In 1877, she began studying under pianist John Orth in Boston and they married in 1883. Orth composed numerous piano pieces for children and two children's operas, Mother Goose's Jubilee (1901) and The Song of the Sea-shell (1903).
2023-12-14T15:57:16Z
2023-12-15T19:28:44Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lizette_Emma_Orth
75,564,128
Gliese 414
GJ 414, also known as Gliese 414, is a binary system made up of an orange dwarf and a red dwarf, located about 39 light years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. With an apparent magnitude of 8.31, it is not visible to the naked eye. The main component of the system, GJ 414 A, is a relatively active orange dwarf, about 68% the size of the Sun and 65% its mass. Its age is estimated at 12.4 billion years, about two and a half times the age of the Solar System. It is orbited by two known exoplanets, called GJ 414 A b and GJ 414 A c. The secondary component, GJ 414 B, is a red dwarf of type M2V, that is 55% the size of the Sun and 54% its mass. Unlike its companion star, GJ 414 B is not orbited by any known planets. The closest star to the star system is CW Ursae Majoris, at a distance of 5.3 light-years. The primary star, GJ 414 A, is orbited by two exoplanets. They were discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "GJ 414, also known as Gliese 414, is a binary system made up of an orange dwarf and a red dwarf, located about 39 light years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. With an apparent magnitude of 8.31, it is not visible to the naked eye.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The main component of the system, GJ 414 A, is a relatively active orange dwarf, about 68% the size of the Sun and 65% its mass. Its age is estimated at 12.4 billion years, about two and a half times the age of the Solar System. It is orbited by two known exoplanets, called GJ 414 A b and GJ 414 A c.", "title": "Characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The secondary component, GJ 414 B, is a red dwarf of type M2V, that is 55% the size of the Sun and 54% its mass. Unlike its companion star, GJ 414 B is not orbited by any known planets.", "title": "Characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The closest star to the star system is CW Ursae Majoris, at a distance of 5.3 light-years.", "title": "Characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The primary star, GJ 414 A, is orbited by two exoplanets. They were discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT.", "title": "Planetary system" } ]
GJ 414, also known as Gliese 414, is a binary system made up of an orange dwarf and a red dwarf, located about 39 light years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. With an apparent magnitude of 8.31, it is not visible to the naked eye.
2023-12-14T16:06:03Z
2023-12-15T22:37:18Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gliese_414
75,564,152
Waldo's
Waldo's (officially Waldo's Dólar Mart de México S. de R.L. de C.V., Waldo's L.L.C.) is a privately held company operating three chains of retail stores. The namesake chain Waldo's consists of more than 800 discount stores across Mexico as of May 2023, with a merchandise selection similar to that of a dollar store in the United States, although without focusing on a specific single price point (or multiple thereof). Most products are priced between 9.99 and 29.99 pesos, about US$0.60 to US$1.75 as of December 2023. Other chains are Eleczión for clothing with 200 stores (Dec. 2023), and Waldo's Motos carrying motorcycles. Until 2023 the company was based in Tijuana, but in May of that year it moved its headquarters to Mexico City. In 1999, Waldo's opened four stores in Tijuana, a large city along the border on the U.S. border next to San Diego, using the U.S. dollar store model. From 4 stores in Baja California by 2005 it had grown to 147 stores in 21 of the 31 Mexican states. In 2022 Waldo's opened its 500th store in Mexico. In May 2023, the company announced that: Products carried are similar to dollar stores in the U.S.: Since 2022 Waldo's also has separate stores branded Waldo's Motos selling motorcycles, thus competing with top retailer Elektra. Waldo's acknowledged in a 2023 interview that its entry into e-commerce in late 2020 was "very late". It offers online sales via its website waldos.com.mx and also has a mobile app. As of 2023, the company states that it has about 12,000 e-commerce transactions a month, increasing to about 20,000 a month nearer the year-end holidays, and that the average e-commerce transaction is about 6 times larger than in-store transactions. Its e-commerce product range is wider than in stores, with a much wider selection of products especially in certain categories such as small and large appliances, travel-related products, homewares, home decor and special offers. Waldo's offers both a credit card, as well as international money transfers to Mexico with cash pickup at Waldo's stores, and runs the foundation Corazones con Vizión. Waldo's has distribution centers in Lerma, Guadalajara, and Tijuana. The retailer had about 9,000 direct employees as of May 2023. According to the Waldo's website in December 2023, stores are distributed as follows across the 32 federal entities (31 states plus Mexico City):
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Waldo's (officially Waldo's Dólar Mart de México S. de R.L. de C.V., Waldo's L.L.C.) is a privately held company operating three chains of retail stores. The namesake chain Waldo's consists of more than 800 discount stores across Mexico as of May 2023, with a merchandise selection similar to that of a dollar store in the United States, although without focusing on a specific single price point (or multiple thereof). Most products are priced between 9.99 and 29.99 pesos, about US$0.60 to US$1.75 as of December 2023.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Other chains are Eleczión for clothing with 200 stores (Dec. 2023), and Waldo's Motos carrying motorcycles.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Until 2023 the company was based in Tijuana, but in May of that year it moved its headquarters to Mexico City.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 1999, Waldo's opened four stores in Tijuana, a large city along the border on the U.S. border next to San Diego, using the U.S. dollar store model.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "From 4 stores in Baja California by 2005 it had grown to 147 stores in 21 of the 31 Mexican states. In 2022 Waldo's opened its 500th store in Mexico. In May 2023, the company announced that:", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Products carried are similar to dollar stores in the U.S.:", "title": "Product categories" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Since 2022 Waldo's also has separate stores branded Waldo's Motos selling motorcycles, thus competing with top retailer Elektra.", "title": "Product categories" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Waldo's acknowledged in a 2023 interview that its entry into e-commerce in late 2020 was \"very late\". It offers online sales via its website waldos.com.mx and also has a mobile app. As of 2023, the company states that it has about 12,000 e-commerce transactions a month, increasing to about 20,000 a month nearer the year-end holidays, and that the average e-commerce transaction is about 6 times larger than in-store transactions. Its e-commerce product range is wider than in stores, with a much wider selection of products especially in certain categories such as small and large appliances, travel-related products, homewares, home decor and special offers.", "title": "E-commerce" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Waldo's offers both a credit card, as well as international money transfers to Mexico with cash pickup at Waldo's stores, and runs the foundation Corazones con Vizión.", "title": "Financial services" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "Waldo's has distribution centers in Lerma, Guadalajara, and Tijuana. The retailer had about 9,000 direct employees as of May 2023.", "title": "Facilities" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "According to the Waldo's website in December 2023, stores are distributed as follows across the 32 federal entities (31 states plus Mexico City):", "title": "Geographic distribution" } ]
Waldo's is a privately held company operating three chains of retail stores. The namesake chain Waldo's consists of more than 800 discount stores across Mexico as of May 2023, with a merchandise selection similar to that of a dollar store in the United States, although without focusing on a specific single price point. Most products are priced between 9.99 and 29.99 pesos, about US$0.60 to US$1.75 as of December 2023. Other chains are Eleczión for clothing with 200 stores, and Waldo's Motos carrying motorcycles. Until 2023 the company was based in Tijuana, but in May of that year it moved its headquarters to Mexico City.
2023-12-14T16:08:59Z
2023-12-18T22:45:13Z
[ "Template:Cite news", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Reflist" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldo%27s
75,564,168
Risen Christ Church, Peravallur
Risen Christ Church is a Catholic Church located at Peravallur neighbourhood in Chennai of Tamil Nadu state in the peninsular India. This church is situated with the geographic coordinates of (13°07′13″N 80°13′29″E / 13.120201°N 80.224801°E / 13.120201; 80.224801) at an altitude of about 32.31 metres (106.0 ft) above the mean sea level, on Paper Mills Road in Peravallur. The substations of this church are as follows:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Risen Christ Church is a Catholic Church located at Peravallur neighbourhood in Chennai of Tamil Nadu state in the peninsular India.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "This church is situated with the geographic coordinates of (13°07′13″N 80°13′29″E / 13.120201°N 80.224801°E / 13.120201; 80.224801) at an altitude of about 32.31 metres (106.0 ft) above the mean sea level, on Paper Mills Road in Peravallur.", "title": "Location" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The substations of this church are as follows:", "title": "Substations" } ]
Risen Christ Church is a Catholic Church located at Peravallur neighbourhood in Chennai of Tamil Nadu state in the peninsular India.
2023-12-14T16:11:11Z
2023-12-14T16:17:25Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risen_Christ_Church,_Peravallur
75,564,207
Ancient Astronauts (Motorpsycho album)
Ancient Astronauts is a studio album by Norwegian rock band Motorpsycho. It was released on August 19, 2022, through the record labels Rune Grammofon, Motorpsychodelic Tunes and Stickman Records. It was released on vinyl, CD, and digital media. Motorpsycho collaborated with choreographer and founder of the Impure Dance Company Hooman Sharifi in which they provided live music for a solo dance performance. At his request for more music they built upon compositions that would become the songs "Mona Lisa/Azrael" and "Chariot Of The Sun". This inspired them to work on a new project which would be soundtracking a film featuring a Norwegian theatre performance group whom they have worked with previously called De Utvalgte, local dancers and the band themselves. They named the project "Ancient Astronauts" and filmed it at the Ringnes Festival in Skotbu, Norway. Commenting on the film project's name which would eventually become the album's title the band's lead vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Bent Sæther stated that, "as a rock band you sometimes feel like you’re picking up traces from all these other ancient astronauts that have travelled the same musical highways as you have. And sometimes you feel like you might be the ones leaving traces for future generations.” In another interview the band further showed how they were motivated by the principle of the theory of ancient astronauts in that they were inspired by and acting as ancient astronauts themselves saying, "sometimes we feel like we're just rediscovering ancient knowledge left here for us to find by previous generations (standing on the shoulders of giants so to speak), but sometimes you feel like you’re the one depositing material for future artists to hopefully be inspired by too." The album features songwriting techniques, instrumentation and production similar to the initial era of progressive rock made in the 1966 to 1974 time period. The statement by Bent Sæther about the band's lean in this direction for the current album was that, "I’d say we’re pre-progressive. I really enjoy the spirit of a lot of those albums and artists. I can really get into that mindset.” This included the use of instruments such as multi-neck guitars/basses, synthesizers and electronics including the Mellotron, Buchla and the Moog Taurus 3. PopMatters brought out the early prog style influence with the band "manifesting 1970s progressive rock (think Canterbury scene) for contemporary times." Adding to the final sound produced included the Gibson SG Standard played by guitarist Hans Magnus "Snah" Ryan through various Marshall JMP amps with Cornish guitar effects pedals. The bass gear consisted of a Danelectro 4/6 double neck, Sunn Model T, Acoustic 470 amp heads and effects including the Catalinbread Echorec, EHX POG (polyphonic octave generator), Fjord Fuzz Embla, and a Schaffer–Vega Storm. The songs were created independently musically and lyrical with no overall theme which was confirmed by the band when asked if it was a concept album. "The only real concept albums we have done are the commissioned works that were written for something particular" such as their albums The Death Defying Unicorn and En Konsert For Folk Flest. A week after completion of the filming the band entered Amper Tone studio in Oslo to record the tracks for a new album. They performed as a trio recording the songs live for the majority of the album. Few overdubs were later added. The bands occasional collaborator guitarist Reine Fiske could not travel from his home in Stockholm to compose or record with the band due to travel restrictions at the time. The band had to take up extra musical roles as Sæther commented they were double and triple tasking during the recordings as he was, "doublenecking all the way and bass pedaling along..." This was heard on the elaborate twenty-two minute long "Chariot Of The Sun – To Phaeton On The Occasion Of Sunrise (Theme From An Imaginary Movie)" which was described by Louder Sound as, "gnarly avant-rock that grows ever more urgent and intense." Helge Sten contributed his buchla synth playing to the track "Flower of Awareness". This resulted in a shorter length composition full of "controlled industrial feedback and rumbling, low-end drones". The album cover and artwork features images of the band members from the film they created at the Ringnes Festival in Skotbu, Norway. The band promoted the album with European performances and festival appearances including a tour of England in 2023 which was the first time they toured there in 3 years. Ancient Astronauts received a score of 82 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on 4 critic reviews resulting in a generally favorable reception. Metal Hammer described the album as a work from a band "that operates seamlessly on the cosmic sonic boundaries of psychedelic, prog and space rock..." The song "Chariot Of The Sun – To Phaeton On The Occasion Of Sunrise (Theme From An Imagined Movie)" was described by Classic Rock magazine as a "full-blown fuzz-pedal rock monster" with musical passages containing, "drones and shimmering interplay, highs and stupefying lows." Mojo observed "The Ladder" as a "highspeed spin cycle of switchback riffing and molten-fuzz soloing, King Crimson’s Red taken for a ride by Rush." AllMusic showed that although the band was reduced to the power trio format without guitarist Reine Fiske they multitasked a cohesive album saying, "No matter how far afield this obsessive adventure travels, it remains compellingly listenable, and Motorpsycho never lose the plot." This saw them arriving, "at yet another creative peak."
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Ancient Astronauts is a studio album by Norwegian rock band Motorpsycho. It was released on August 19, 2022, through the record labels Rune Grammofon, Motorpsychodelic Tunes and Stickman Records. It was released on vinyl, CD, and digital media.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Motorpsycho collaborated with choreographer and founder of the Impure Dance Company Hooman Sharifi in which they provided live music for a solo dance performance. At his request for more music they built upon compositions that would become the songs \"Mona Lisa/Azrael\" and \"Chariot Of The Sun\". This inspired them to work on a new project which would be soundtracking a film featuring a Norwegian theatre performance group whom they have worked with previously called De Utvalgte, local dancers and the band themselves. They named the project \"Ancient Astronauts\" and filmed it at the Ringnes Festival in Skotbu, Norway.", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Commenting on the film project's name which would eventually become the album's title the band's lead vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Bent Sæther stated that, \"as a rock band you sometimes feel like you’re picking up traces from all these other ancient astronauts that have travelled the same musical highways as you have. And sometimes you feel like you might be the ones leaving traces for future generations.” In another interview the band further showed how they were motivated by the principle of the theory of ancient astronauts in that they were inspired by and acting as ancient astronauts themselves saying, \"sometimes we feel like we're just rediscovering ancient knowledge left here for us to find by previous generations (standing on the shoulders of giants so to speak), but sometimes you feel like you’re the one depositing material for future artists to hopefully be inspired by too.\"", "title": "Background" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The album features songwriting techniques, instrumentation and production similar to the initial era of progressive rock made in the 1966 to 1974 time period. The statement by Bent Sæther about the band's lean in this direction for the current album was that, \"I’d say we’re pre-progressive. I really enjoy the spirit of a lot of those albums and artists. I can really get into that mindset.” This included the use of instruments such as multi-neck guitars/basses, synthesizers and electronics including the Mellotron, Buchla and the Moog Taurus 3. PopMatters brought out the early prog style influence with the band \"manifesting 1970s progressive rock (think Canterbury scene) for contemporary times.\"", "title": "Musical style, writing, composition" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Adding to the final sound produced included the Gibson SG Standard played by guitarist Hans Magnus \"Snah\" Ryan through various Marshall JMP amps with Cornish guitar effects pedals. The bass gear consisted of a Danelectro 4/6 double neck, Sunn Model T, Acoustic 470 amp heads and effects including the Catalinbread Echorec, EHX POG (polyphonic octave generator), Fjord Fuzz Embla, and a Schaffer–Vega Storm.", "title": "Musical style, writing, composition" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The songs were created independently musically and lyrical with no overall theme which was confirmed by the band when asked if it was a concept album. \"The only real concept albums we have done are the commissioned works that were written for something particular\" such as their albums The Death Defying Unicorn and En Konsert For Folk Flest.", "title": "Musical style, writing, composition" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "A week after completion of the filming the band entered Amper Tone studio in Oslo to record the tracks for a new album. They performed as a trio recording the songs live for the majority of the album. Few overdubs were later added. The bands occasional collaborator guitarist Reine Fiske could not travel from his home in Stockholm to compose or record with the band due to travel restrictions at the time. The band had to take up extra musical roles as Sæther commented they were double and triple tasking during the recordings as he was, \"doublenecking all the way and bass pedaling along...\" This was heard on the elaborate twenty-two minute long \"Chariot Of The Sun – To Phaeton On The Occasion Of Sunrise (Theme From An Imaginary Movie)\" which was described by Louder Sound as, \"gnarly avant-rock that grows ever more urgent and intense.\" Helge Sten contributed his buchla synth playing to the track \"Flower of Awareness\". This resulted in a shorter length composition full of \"controlled industrial feedback and rumbling, low-end drones\".", "title": "Recording, production" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "The album cover and artwork features images of the band members from the film they created at the Ringnes Festival in Skotbu, Norway. The band promoted the album with European performances and festival appearances including a tour of England in 2023 which was the first time they toured there in 3 years.", "title": "Artwork, promotion" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Ancient Astronauts received a score of 82 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on 4 critic reviews resulting in a generally favorable reception. Metal Hammer described the album as a work from a band \"that operates seamlessly on the cosmic sonic boundaries of psychedelic, prog and space rock...\" The song \"Chariot Of The Sun – To Phaeton On The Occasion Of Sunrise (Theme From An Imagined Movie)\" was described by Classic Rock magazine as a \"full-blown fuzz-pedal rock monster\" with musical passages containing, \"drones and shimmering interplay, highs and stupefying lows.\" Mojo observed \"The Ladder\" as a \"highspeed spin cycle of switchback riffing and molten-fuzz soloing, King Crimson’s Red taken for a ride by Rush.\"", "title": "Critical reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "AllMusic showed that although the band was reduced to the power trio format without guitarist Reine Fiske they multitasked a cohesive album saying, \"No matter how far afield this obsessive adventure travels, it remains compellingly listenable, and Motorpsycho never lose the plot.\" This saw them arriving, \"at yet another creative peak.\"", "title": "Critical reception" } ]
Ancient Astronauts is a studio album by Norwegian rock band Motorpsycho. It was released on August 19, 2022, through the record labels Rune Grammofon, Motorpsychodelic Tunes and Stickman Records. It was released on vinyl, CD, and digital media.
2023-12-14T16:16:11Z
2023-12-20T20:59:14Z
[ "Template:Album chart", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite journal", "Template:Motorpsycho", "Template:Infobox album", "Template:Multiple image", "Template:Music ratings", "Template:Track listing" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Astronauts_(Motorpsycho_album)
75,564,235
Athletics at the 2023 Parapan American Games – Men's 400 metres T12
The men's T12 400 metres competition of the athletics events at the 2023 Parapan American Games was held on November 22 at the Mario Recordón Athletics Training Center within the Julio Martínez National Stadium of Santiago, Chile. Due to the event having only three competitors, only the gold and silver medals were presented. Prior to this competition, the existing world and Pan American Games records were as follows: All times shown are in seconds. The results were as follows:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The men's T12 400 metres competition of the athletics events at the 2023 Parapan American Games was held on November 22 at the Mario Recordón Athletics Training Center within the Julio Martínez National Stadium of Santiago, Chile. Due to the event having only three competitors, only the gold and silver medals were presented.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Prior to this competition, the existing world and Pan American Games records were as follows:", "title": "Records" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "All times shown are in seconds.", "title": "Results" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The results were as follows:", "title": "Results" } ]
The men's T12 400 metres competition of the athletics events at the 2023 Parapan American Games was held on November 22 at the Mario Recordón Athletics Training Center within the Julio Martínez National Stadium of Santiago, Chile. Due to the event having only three competitors, only the gold and silver medals were presented.
2023-12-14T16:19:03Z
2023-12-17T18:01:45Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletics_at_the_2023_Parapan_American_Games_%E2%80%93_Men%27s_400_metres_T12
75,564,246
Kyowa Party
Kyowa Party (Japanese: 共和党, Kyōwatō, lit. 'Republican Party') is a political party in Japan founded by former Prime Minister and Democratic Party of Japan leader Yukio Hatoyama and former House of Representatives member Nobuhiko Shuto in 2020. On October 2019, former Prime Minister and Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) leader Yukio Hatoyama announced his intention to return to politics after his retirement in 2012. Hatoyama stated that he would grow the party to have 30 members in the National Diet by 2030. The party was officially launched on 14 July 2020 with former House of Representatives and DPJ member Nobuhiko Shuto as deputy leader. On June 2022, Hatoyama held a press conference and announced his intention to run in the next general election which is scheduled to take place on or before October 2025 in order to formally return to politics. The party also fielded two candidates in the 2022 House of Councillors election for Tokyo and Kanagawa at-large districts, but did not win any seats, receiving only 41,014 votes (0.08% of the popular vote).
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Kyowa Party (Japanese: 共和党, Kyōwatō, lit. 'Republican Party') is a political party in Japan founded by former Prime Minister and Democratic Party of Japan leader Yukio Hatoyama and former House of Representatives member Nobuhiko Shuto in 2020.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "On October 2019, former Prime Minister and Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) leader Yukio Hatoyama announced his intention to return to politics after his retirement in 2012. Hatoyama stated that he would grow the party to have 30 members in the National Diet by 2030. The party was officially launched on 14 July 2020 with former House of Representatives and DPJ member Nobuhiko Shuto as deputy leader.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "On June 2022, Hatoyama held a press conference and announced his intention to run in the next general election which is scheduled to take place on or before October 2025 in order to formally return to politics. The party also fielded two candidates in the 2022 House of Councillors election for Tokyo and Kanagawa at-large districts, but did not win any seats, receiving only 41,014 votes (0.08% of the popular vote).", "title": "History" } ]
Kyowa Party is a political party in Japan founded by former Prime Minister and Democratic Party of Japan leader Yukio Hatoyama and former House of Representatives member Nobuhiko Shuto in 2020.
2023-12-14T16:20:32Z
2023-12-29T22:14:59Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyowa_Party
75,564,247
Pugnido Refugee Camp
Pugnido refugee camp is a refugee camp located in the Gambela region of western Ethiopia and stands as the oldest established refugee camp in the region and one of the biggest in Africa. It has been a sanctuary for South Sudan refugees who migrated in various waves, starting in 1993. It has provided shelter for those who sought refuge in the aftermath of conflicts that occurred in their country of origin mainly after December 2013. Pugnido Refugee Camp was established in 1993 as a means of accommodating refugees who were escaping the civil war in South Sudan. Since its inception, it has served as a secure sanctuary for individuals from South Sudan who have been compelled to flee their homeland due to various conflicts. Pugnido Refugee Camp is located in the Gambella Region of Western Ethiopia. As of May 2019, Pugnido Refugee Camp accommodated a total of 68,176 individuals seeking refuge, with the majority comprising South Sudanese nationals.As of March 2020, it accommodated a total of 42,749 individuals, and 43,033 individuals by May 2020. The camp provides basic services such as food, water, shelter, and medical care to its residents. The camp also has schools and vocational training centers to provide education and skills to the refugees. The camp faces several challenges such as overcrowding, inadequate funding, and limited resources. The camp is also prone to flooding during the rainy season, which poses a risk to the health and safety of the refugees.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Pugnido refugee camp is a refugee camp located in the Gambela region of western Ethiopia and stands as the oldest established refugee camp in the region and one of the biggest in Africa. It has been a sanctuary for South Sudan refugees who migrated in various waves, starting in 1993. It has provided shelter for those who sought refuge in the aftermath of conflicts that occurred in their country of origin mainly after December 2013.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Pugnido Refugee Camp was established in 1993 as a means of accommodating refugees who were escaping the civil war in South Sudan. Since its inception, it has served as a secure sanctuary for individuals from South Sudan who have been compelled to flee their homeland due to various conflicts.", "title": "History" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Pugnido Refugee Camp is located in the Gambella Region of Western Ethiopia.", "title": "Location" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "As of May 2019, Pugnido Refugee Camp accommodated a total of 68,176 individuals seeking refuge, with the majority comprising South Sudanese nationals.As of March 2020, it accommodated a total of 42,749 individuals, and 43,033 individuals by May 2020.", "title": "Demographics" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The camp provides basic services such as food, water, shelter, and medical care to its residents. The camp also has schools and vocational training centers to provide education and skills to the refugees.", "title": "Facilities" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "The camp faces several challenges such as overcrowding, inadequate funding, and limited resources. The camp is also prone to flooding during the rainy season, which poses a risk to the health and safety of the refugees.", "title": "Challenges" } ]
Pugnido refugee camp is a refugee camp located in the Gambela region of western Ethiopia and stands as the oldest established refugee camp in the region and one of the biggest in Africa. It has been a sanctuary for South Sudan refugees who migrated in various waves, starting in 1993. It has provided shelter for those who sought refuge in the aftermath of conflicts that occurred in their country of origin mainly after December 2013.
2023-12-14T16:20:52Z
2023-12-17T17:43:03Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pugnido_Refugee_Camp
75,564,253
Gliese 414 Ac
GJ 414 A c, or Gliese 414 A c, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It is at least 56 times more massive and about 9 times larger than the Earth. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 1.43 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 2 years and 18 days. It is a potential candidate for future direct imaging missions. Gliese 414 A c is a super-Neptune exoplanet. It is 8.78 times larger than Earth, but 21.7% smaller than Jupiter. Its minimum mass is 56.27 M🜨. Gliese 414 A c completes an orbit around its star every two years and 18 days, and is 1.43 astronomical units (214,000,000 km) away from it. Due to its large separation, the planet is very frigid, with an planetary equilibrium temperature of −150 °C (−238 °F), that is comparable to Saturn, which has a temperature of -140°C. GJ 414 A c was discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT. Gliese 414 A c orbits an orange dwarf about 70% the size of the Sun. The star also hosts another exoplanet, called Gliese 414 A b, a Sub-Neptune that orbits it 6 times closer than the outermost planet, at a distance of 0.24 AU. In addition to a planetary system, it also has a red dwarf companion star, that is 408 astronomical units apart.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "GJ 414 A c, or Gliese 414 A c, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It is at least 56 times more massive and about 9 times larger than the Earth. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 1.43 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 2 years and 18 days.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "It is a potential candidate for future direct imaging missions.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Gliese 414 A c is a super-Neptune exoplanet. It is 8.78 times larger than Earth, but 21.7% smaller than Jupiter. Its minimum mass is 56.27 M🜨.", "title": "Physical characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Gliese 414 A c completes an orbit around its star every two years and 18 days, and is 1.43 astronomical units (214,000,000 km) away from it.", "title": "Orbital characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Due to its large separation, the planet is very frigid, with an planetary equilibrium temperature of −150 °C (−238 °F), that is comparable to Saturn, which has a temperature of -140°C.", "title": "Orbital characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "GJ 414 A c was discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT.", "title": "Discovery" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Gliese 414 A c orbits an orange dwarf about 70% the size of the Sun. The star also hosts another exoplanet, called Gliese 414 A b, a Sub-Neptune that orbits it 6 times closer than the outermost planet, at a distance of 0.24 AU.", "title": "Host star" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In addition to a planetary system, it also has a red dwarf companion star, that is 408 astronomical units apart.", "title": "Host star" } ]
GJ 414 A c, or Gliese 414 A c, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It is at least 56 times more massive and about 9 times larger than the Earth. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 1.43 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 2 years and 18 days. It is a potential candidate for future direct imaging missions.
2023-12-14T16:21:19Z
2023-12-22T03:26:22Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gliese_414_Ac
75,564,256
Robert Kiprop
Robert Kiprop Koech (born 25 February 1997) is a Kenyan long-distance runner. He was the gold medalist in the 5000 m at the 2019 African Games. Kiprop is from the city of Iten in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, Kenya. On 22 June 2019, Kiprop had a breakthrough to win the Kenyan African Games trials 5000 m in a time of 13:37.1. Despite winning the trials, Kiprop was initially excluded from the Kenyan African Games squad for not meeting the 13:30.00 national standard, but an exception was later made to include him. He would go on to win the championships in a time of 13:30.96, leading a Kenyan sweep of the medals in the event. Kiprop went on to finish second at the 2019 Kenyan World Championship trials, but he was not selected for the Kenyan team. After a lull from 2020 to 2022, in late 2022 Kiprop had a resurgence in winning the 2022 Bangsaen10 road race. In 2023, he secured his second national podium placing, finishing runner-up in the 5000 m at the Kenyan champs. In late 2023 he said his target was to make the 2024 Olympic Games team for Kenya.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Robert Kiprop Koech (born 25 February 1997) is a Kenyan long-distance runner. He was the gold medalist in the 5000 m at the 2019 African Games.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Kiprop is from the city of Iten in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, Kenya.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "On 22 June 2019, Kiprop had a breakthrough to win the Kenyan African Games trials 5000 m in a time of 13:37.1. Despite winning the trials, Kiprop was initially excluded from the Kenyan African Games squad for not meeting the 13:30.00 national standard, but an exception was later made to include him. He would go on to win the championships in a time of 13:30.96, leading a Kenyan sweep of the medals in the event. Kiprop went on to finish second at the 2019 Kenyan World Championship trials, but he was not selected for the Kenyan team.", "title": "Biography" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "After a lull from 2020 to 2022, in late 2022 Kiprop had a resurgence in winning the 2022 Bangsaen10 road race. In 2023, he secured his second national podium placing, finishing runner-up in the 5000 m at the Kenyan champs. In late 2023 he said his target was to make the 2024 Olympic Games team for Kenya.", "title": "Biography" } ]
Robert Kiprop Koech is a Kenyan long-distance runner. He was the gold medalist in the 5000 m at the 2019 African Games.
2023-12-14T16:22:07Z
2023-12-14T16:28:40Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Kiprop
75,564,302
2024 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts
The 2024 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts presented by RME, the provincial women's curling championship for Manitoba, will be held from January 24 to 28 at the Access Event Center in Morden, Manitoba. The winning rink will represent Manitoba at the 2024 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Canada's national women's curling championship in Calgary, Alberta. Source: The teams are listed as follows: Records from Round Robin carry over to the Championship Round Source:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The 2024 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts presented by RME, the provincial women's curling championship for Manitoba, will be held from January 24 to 28 at the Access Event Center in Morden, Manitoba.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The winning rink will represent Manitoba at the 2024 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Canada's national women's curling championship in Calgary, Alberta.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Source:", "title": "Qualification process" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The teams are listed as follows:", "title": "Teams" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Records from Round Robin carry over to the Championship Round", "title": "Championship round standings" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Source:", "title": "Playoffs" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "", "title": "Playoffs" } ]
The 2024 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts presented by RME, the provincial women's curling championship for Manitoba, will be held from January 24 to 28 at the Access Event Center in Morden, Manitoba. The winning rink will represent Manitoba at the 2024 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Canada's national women's curling championship in Calgary, Alberta.
2023-12-14T16:27:29Z
2023-12-23T16:10:28Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Manitoba_Scotties_Tournament_of_Hearts
75,564,320
Always (Matana Roberts album)
Always is a solo album by saxophonist and composer Matana Roberts. Consisting of an untitled 33 minute track, followed by a 10 minute encore, it was recorded on May 6, 2014, at Park West Studios in Brookyln, New York, and was released in 2015 by Relative Pitch Records. In a review for The Wire, Andy Hamilton called the album "an intimate affair," and wrote: "The pieces have a softness and slowness to them... The feeling of being at peace - a prevailing calm even when dealing with the music's own natural tensions flows throughout." Mark Corroto of All About Jazz stated: "Listening to a virtuoso saxophonist like Matana Roberts, one hears more than just breath through a reed instrument. Her solo recording Always, travels beyond voice, to mind, body, and spirit... Underlying all is the corporeal substance of her being. That essence of her spirit's expression that shines throughout this recording." The editors of The Free Jazz Collective awarded the album a full 5 stars, and reviewer Martin Schray commented: "As in a stream of consciousness Roberts seems to look for a topic, a recurrent theme, a plan she wants to follow... She wanders through the history of great black music, standing on the shoulders of giants... You can recognize bebop licks, blues riffs, staccato rhythms, free jazz runs and balladesque craving. It's a communication with herself, a masterful private meditation, it's about looking for an original sound." Writing for The Quietus, Stewart Smith noted that Roberts is "quite simply one of the most important living artists in any field," and remarked: "Solo saxophone albums can be a hard sell, but this seemingly modest effort is a beautiful thing... her playing really is poetic, as she calmly moves from long lyrical lines to tight runs of complex harmony." Bruce Lee Gallanter of the Downtown Music Gallery described the album as "superb... one of tastiest gems of the year." He wrote: "Ms. Roberts closed her eyes and dug deep within to provide us with some sublime, heartfelt sonic medicine... this music is like a candle burning which can't be easily extinguished. In the center of the flame is hope for a better day." Composed by Matana Roberts.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Always is a solo album by saxophonist and composer Matana Roberts. Consisting of an untitled 33 minute track, followed by a 10 minute encore, it was recorded on May 6, 2014, at Park West Studios in Brookyln, New York, and was released in 2015 by Relative Pitch Records.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "In a review for The Wire, Andy Hamilton called the album \"an intimate affair,\" and wrote: \"The pieces have a softness and slowness to them... The feeling of being at peace - a prevailing calm even when dealing with the music's own natural tensions flows throughout.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Mark Corroto of All About Jazz stated: \"Listening to a virtuoso saxophonist like Matana Roberts, one hears more than just breath through a reed instrument. Her solo recording Always, travels beyond voice, to mind, body, and spirit... Underlying all is the corporeal substance of her being. That essence of her spirit's expression that shines throughout this recording.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "The editors of The Free Jazz Collective awarded the album a full 5 stars, and reviewer Martin Schray commented: \"As in a stream of consciousness Roberts seems to look for a topic, a recurrent theme, a plan she wants to follow... She wanders through the history of great black music, standing on the shoulders of giants... You can recognize bebop licks, blues riffs, staccato rhythms, free jazz runs and balladesque craving. It's a communication with herself, a masterful private meditation, it's about looking for an original sound.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Writing for The Quietus, Stewart Smith noted that Roberts is \"quite simply one of the most important living artists in any field,\" and remarked: \"Solo saxophone albums can be a hard sell, but this seemingly modest effort is a beautiful thing... her playing really is poetic, as she calmly moves from long lyrical lines to tight runs of complex harmony.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Bruce Lee Gallanter of the Downtown Music Gallery described the album as \"superb... one of tastiest gems of the year.\" He wrote: \"Ms. Roberts closed her eyes and dug deep within to provide us with some sublime, heartfelt sonic medicine... this music is like a candle burning which can't be easily extinguished. In the center of the flame is hope for a better day.\"", "title": "Reception" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Composed by Matana Roberts.", "title": "Track listing" } ]
Always is a solo album by saxophonist and composer Matana Roberts. Consisting of an untitled 33 minute track, followed by a 10 minute encore, it was recorded on May 6, 2014, at Park West Studios in Brookyln, New York, and was released in 2015 by Relative Pitch Records.
2023-12-14T16:30:05Z
2023-12-15T10:25:23Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Always_(Matana_Roberts_album)
75,564,322
Muhammad Erry Hidayat
Muhammad Erry Hidayat (born 24 November 1999) is a Malaysian weightlifter. He is the son of the country's former weightlifting great Hidayat Hamidon who was the 1998 gold medal medalists in weightlifting at the 1998 Commonwealth Games. He has won several medals in various competitions, including a bronze medal at the 2019 SEA Games in Manila and a silver at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Erry also won a bronze medal at the 2021 SEA Games in Vietnam and renewed the National 73 kg Weightlifting record by lifting 316 kg. In November 2023, Erry was crowned the Federal Territories Sportsman for 2021/2022. Erry made his international debut in 2015 at the 2015 Commonwealth Youth Games in Apia, Samoa where he won a gold in 69 kg category. At the age of 17, Erry won gold at the 2016 Sukma Games in the 69 kg final. In clean and jerk category, he managed to get a bronze medal after lifting weighing 143 kg. At the 2017 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Erry managed to finished 4th in the Men's 69kg event as a future prospect for Malaysia in Weightlifting. In April 2018, Erry competed in the 2018 Commonwealth Games but had to accept the defeat after placing 5th in the Men's 69 kg with a total 291. At the 2019 SEA Games in Manila, Philippines. Erry brought a bronze medal for Malaysia in the Men's 69kg. In the same year, Erry made his debut at the 2019 IWF Championships. However, he wasn't managed to finish the event. In 2021, Erry competed at the 2021 IWF Championships. He only managed to finished 12th with a total of 301 kg in Men's 73 kg. At the 2021 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships, he won a silver medal in the Men's 73 kg. In May 2022, he broke his previous national record with a total 316 kg combined to retain his bronze medal in the men's 73 kg category at the 2021 SEA Games. This bettered his national record of 312 kg, 141 kg in snatch and 171 kg in clean and jerk which was set in Melaka in 2020. He also bagged a silver in the 73 kg at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Erry contented with an overall lift of 303 kg, having recorded 138 kg in snatch and 165 kg in clean and jerk.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Muhammad Erry Hidayat (born 24 November 1999) is a Malaysian weightlifter. He is the son of the country's former weightlifting great Hidayat Hamidon who was the 1998 gold medal medalists in weightlifting at the 1998 Commonwealth Games. He has won several medals in various competitions, including a bronze medal at the 2019 SEA Games in Manila and a silver at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Erry also won a bronze medal at the 2021 SEA Games in Vietnam and renewed the National 73 kg Weightlifting record by lifting 316 kg. In November 2023, Erry was crowned the Federal Territories Sportsman for 2021/2022.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Erry made his international debut in 2015 at the 2015 Commonwealth Youth Games in Apia, Samoa where he won a gold in 69 kg category.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "At the age of 17, Erry won gold at the 2016 Sukma Games in the 69 kg final. In clean and jerk category, he managed to get a bronze medal after lifting weighing 143 kg.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "At the 2017 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Erry managed to finished 4th in the Men's 69kg event as a future prospect for Malaysia in Weightlifting.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In April 2018, Erry competed in the 2018 Commonwealth Games but had to accept the defeat after placing 5th in the Men's 69 kg with a total 291.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "At the 2019 SEA Games in Manila, Philippines. Erry brought a bronze medal for Malaysia in the Men's 69kg. In the same year, Erry made his debut at the 2019 IWF Championships. However, he wasn't managed to finish the event.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "In 2021, Erry competed at the 2021 IWF Championships. He only managed to finished 12th with a total of 301 kg in Men's 73 kg. At the 2021 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships, he won a silver medal in the Men's 73 kg.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In May 2022, he broke his previous national record with a total 316 kg combined to retain his bronze medal in the men's 73 kg category at the 2021 SEA Games. This bettered his national record of 312 kg, 141 kg in snatch and 171 kg in clean and jerk which was set in Melaka in 2020. He also bagged a silver in the 73 kg at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Erry contented with an overall lift of 303 kg, having recorded 138 kg in snatch and 165 kg in clean and jerk.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "", "title": "External links" } ]
Muhammad Erry Hidayat is a Malaysian weightlifter. He is the son of the country's former weightlifting great Hidayat Hamidon who was the 1998 gold medal medalists in weightlifting at the 1998 Commonwealth Games. He has won several medals in various competitions, including a bronze medal at the 2019 SEA Games in Manila and a silver at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Erry also won a bronze medal at the 2021 SEA Games in Vietnam and renewed the National 73 kg Weightlifting record by lifting 316 kg. In November 2023, Erry was crowned the Federal Territories Sportsman for 2021/2022.
2023-12-14T16:30:11Z
2023-12-17T11:18:57Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Erry_Hidayat
75,564,340
Katharine Augusta Ware
Katharine Augusta Ware (1797-1813) was a 19th-century American poet and the editor of Bower of Taste, a Boston-based periodical. Katharine (sometimes misspelled "Katherine") Augusta Ware was born in 1797 at Quincy, Massachusetts, where her father was a physician. She was remarkable in childhood for a love of reading. She wrote verses at a very early age, and a poem at fifteen, upon the death of Robert Treat Paine, which possessed sufficient merit to be included in the collection of that author's works. In 1819, she married Charles A. Ware, of the United States Navy. In the next few years, she appeared frequently as a writer of odes for public occasions and as a contributor to literary journals. Among her odes was one addressed to Lafayette and presented to him in the ceremony of his reception in Boston, by her eldest child, then five years old; and another, in honor of New York Governor DeWitt Clinton, which was recited at the Erie Canal celebration in New York. In 1828, Ware commenced in Boston the publication of a literary periodical, entitled The Bower of Taste, which was continued several years. She subsequently resided in New York City. In 1839, she went to Europe, where she remained until her death, in Paris in 1843. A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as Moving as if her element were air, And music was the echo of her step; and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George: How sweet to stray along thy flowery shore, Where crystals sparkle in the sunny ray; While the red boatman plies his silvery oar To the wild measure of some rustic lay! and these lines, from an allusion to Athens: Views the broad stadium where the gymnic art Nerved the young arm and energized the heart. or this apostrophe to sculpture, from Musings in St. James's Cemetery: Sculpture, oh, what a triumph o'er the grave Hath thy proud art! thy powerful hand can save From the destroyer's grasp the noble form, As if the spirit dwelt, still thrilling, warm, In every line and feature of the face, The air majestic, and the simple grace Of flowing robes, which shade, but not conceal, All that the classic chisel would reveal. These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Mrs. Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Katharine Augusta Ware (1797-1813) was a 19th-century American poet and the editor of Bower of Taste, a Boston-based periodical.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Katharine (sometimes misspelled \"Katherine\") Augusta Ware was born in 1797 at Quincy, Massachusetts, where her father was a physician. She was remarkable in childhood for a love of reading. She wrote verses at a very early age, and a poem at fifteen, upon the death of Robert Treat Paine, which possessed sufficient merit to be included in the collection of that author's works.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 1819, she married Charles A. Ware, of the United States Navy. In the next few years, she appeared frequently as a writer of odes for public occasions and as a contributor to literary journals. Among her odes was one addressed to Lafayette and presented to him in the ceremony of his reception in Boston, by her eldest child, then five years old; and another, in honor of New York Governor DeWitt Clinton, which was recited at the Erie Canal celebration in New York.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "In 1828, Ware commenced in Boston the publication of a literary periodical, entitled The Bower of Taste, which was continued several years. She subsequently resided in New York City. In 1839, she went to Europe, where she remained until her death, in Paris in 1843.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "Moving as if her element were air, And music was the echo of her step;", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "How sweet to stray along thy flowery shore, Where crystals sparkle in the sunny ray; While the red boatman plies his silvery oar To the wild measure of some rustic lay!", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "and these lines, from an allusion to Athens:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "Views the broad stadium where the gymnic art Nerved the young arm and energized the heart.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 10, "text": "or this apostrophe to sculpture, from Musings in St. James's Cemetery:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 11, "text": "Sculpture, oh, what a triumph o'er the grave Hath thy proud art! thy powerful hand can save From the destroyer's grasp the noble form, As if the spirit dwelt, still thrilling, warm, In every line and feature of the face, The air majestic, and the simple grace Of flowing robes, which shade, but not conceal, All that the classic chisel would reveal.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 12, "text": "These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Mrs. Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.", "title": "" } ]
Katharine Augusta Ware (1797-1813) was a 19th-century American poet and the editor of Bower of Taste, a Boston-based periodical. Katharine Augusta Ware was born in 1797 at Quincy, Massachusetts, where her father was a physician. She was remarkable in childhood for a love of reading. She wrote verses at a very early age, and a poem at fifteen, upon the death of Robert Treat Paine, which possessed sufficient merit to be included in the collection of that author's works. In 1819, she married Charles A. Ware, of the United States Navy. In the next few years, she appeared frequently as a writer of odes for public occasions and as a contributor to literary journals. Among her odes was one addressed to Lafayette and presented to him in the ceremony of his reception in Boston, by her eldest child, then five years old; and another, in honor of New York Governor DeWitt Clinton, which was recited at the Erie Canal celebration in New York. In 1828, Ware commenced in Boston the publication of a literary periodical, entitled The Bower of Taste, which was continued several years. She subsequently resided in New York City. In 1839, she went to Europe, where she remained until her death, in Paris in 1843. A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George: and these lines, from an allusion to Athens: or this apostrophe to sculpture, from Musings in St. James's Cemetery: These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Mrs. Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.
2023-12-14T16:32:42Z
2023-12-14T18:11:37Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_Augusta_Ware
75,564,364
Gliese 414 Ab
GJ 414 A b, also known as Gliese 414 A b, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It has a minimum mass of 8.78 Earths and a diameter 3 times larger. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.24 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 51 days. Gliese 414 A b is a sub-Neptune exoplanet. It is 3 times larger than Earth and at least 8.78 times more massive. Due to its mass, it is likely that the exoplanet is not rocky, but intsead has an volatile-rich envelope. NASA Exoplanet Catalog cites it as a Neptune-like planet. GJ 414 A b orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.24 astronomical units, which places it at the inner edge of the habitable zone, located between 0.37 and 0.7 AU. As it orbits close to the habitable zone, its planetary equilibrium temperature is calculated at 30.7 °C (87.3 °F). The planet's orbit also has a high eccentricity of 0.45+0.19−0.22. GJ 414 A b was discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT. Its parent star, known as GJ 414 A, is an orange dwarf about 70% the size of the Sun. In addition to Gliese 414 A b, the star also hosts Gliese 414 A c, a Super-Neptune orbiting at a distance 6 times greater, of 1.4 AU. It also has a red dwarf companion, located at a distance of 408 AU from the main star.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "GJ 414 A b, also known as Gliese 414 A b, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It has a minimum mass of 8.78 Earths and a diameter 3 times larger. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.24 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 51 days.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Gliese 414 A b is a sub-Neptune exoplanet. It is 3 times larger than Earth and at least 8.78 times more massive. Due to its mass, it is likely that the exoplanet is not rocky, but intsead has an volatile-rich envelope. NASA Exoplanet Catalog cites it as a Neptune-like planet.", "title": "Physical characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "GJ 414 A b orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.24 astronomical units, which places it at the inner edge of the habitable zone, located between 0.37 and 0.7 AU.", "title": "Orbital characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "As it orbits close to the habitable zone, its planetary equilibrium temperature is calculated at 30.7 °C (87.3 °F).", "title": "Orbital characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "The planet's orbit also has a high eccentricity of 0.45+0.19−0.22.", "title": "Orbital characteristics" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "GJ 414 A b was discovered in 2020 by analyzing radial velocity data from Keck's HIRES instrument and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory, as well as photometric data from KELT.", "title": "Discovery" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Its parent star, known as GJ 414 A, is an orange dwarf about 70% the size of the Sun. In addition to Gliese 414 A b, the star also hosts Gliese 414 A c, a Super-Neptune orbiting at a distance 6 times greater, of 1.4 AU.", "title": "Host star" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "It also has a red dwarf companion, located at a distance of 408 AU from the main star.", "title": "Host star" } ]
GJ 414 A b, also known as Gliese 414 A b, is an exoplanet located 39 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Ursa Major. It has a minimum mass of 8.78 Earths and a diameter 3 times larger. Orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.24 astronomical units and completes one revolution every 51 days.
2023-12-14T16:35:32Z
2023-12-22T06:21:58Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gliese_414_Ab
75,564,375
Annie Gray
Dr Annie Gray is a British food historian specialising in the era from the 1650s to 1950s. Gray studied modern history at the University of Oxford, followed by an MA in historical archaeology at the University of York and a PhD from the University of Liverpool. Gray is an honorary fellow at the University of York and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Gray is known for regular appearances on The Kitchen Cabinet as the resident food historian. She has worked on the show since 2012 and wrote the official publication accompanying the series in 2021, which includes a foreword from the show's host, Jay Rayner. Gray worked as an expert on BBC television series The Sweet Makers alongside Emma Dabiri, and on Victorian Bakers. She presented A Merry Tudor Christmas with Lucy Worsley. Gray appeared on The Great British Bake Off as a food historian during series 1–5. In 2016, Gray was granted "privileged access" to cook at Osborne House with James Martin, where the kitchens had not been used since the late 1800s. Gray was a consultant for The Victorian Way series about Victorian cook Avis Crocombe and co-authored the tie-in cookbook. She has also experimented with recipes from the 300-year-old The Unknown Ladies Cookbook. Gray has often been featured in coverage of public celebrations talking about the foods that were historically eaten at related events such as royal banquets, VE Day, or royal jubilees. She has also featured in the media talking about her work reconstructing Christmas dinners from previous eras.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Dr Annie Gray is a British food historian specialising in the era from the 1650s to 1950s.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Gray studied modern history at the University of Oxford, followed by an MA in historical archaeology at the University of York and a PhD from the University of Liverpool. Gray is an honorary fellow at the University of York and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.", "title": "Education and academia" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Gray is known for regular appearances on The Kitchen Cabinet as the resident food historian. She has worked on the show since 2012 and wrote the official publication accompanying the series in 2021, which includes a foreword from the show's host, Jay Rayner.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "Gray worked as an expert on BBC television series The Sweet Makers alongside Emma Dabiri, and on Victorian Bakers. She presented A Merry Tudor Christmas with Lucy Worsley.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "Gray appeared on The Great British Bake Off as a food historian during series 1–5.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "In 2016, Gray was granted \"privileged access\" to cook at Osborne House with James Martin, where the kitchens had not been used since the late 1800s.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Gray was a consultant for The Victorian Way series about Victorian cook Avis Crocombe and co-authored the tie-in cookbook. She has also experimented with recipes from the 300-year-old The Unknown Ladies Cookbook.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "Gray has often been featured in coverage of public celebrations talking about the foods that were historically eaten at related events such as royal banquets, VE Day, or royal jubilees. She has also featured in the media talking about her work reconstructing Christmas dinners from previous eras.", "title": "Career" } ]
Dr Annie Gray is a British food historian specialising in the era from the 1650s to 1950s.
2023-12-14T16:36:43Z
2023-12-18T12:08:17Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_Gray
75,564,411
2024 in North Korea
The following is a list of events from the year 2024 in North Korea.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The following is a list of events from the year 2024 in North Korea.", "title": "" } ]
The following is a list of events from the year 2024 in North Korea.
2023-12-14T16:40:33Z
2023-12-21T09:11:04Z
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_North_Korea
75,564,434
Thrikkandiyoor
Thrikkandiyoor is a village in Tirur Block in Malappuram district of Kerala state in India. The village is known for a Shiva Temple located at the heart of the village. Devotees of Shiva believe that the idol in the temple was installed by Parashurama, the legendary creator of Kerala. It is also believed that this is one of the 108 temples in Kerala constructed under the directions of Parashurama. Another interesting feature of the temple is that there is a clean pond facing the temple, and the area of pond is exactly equal to area of the temple land. The village is adjacent to Tirur Municipal Town and the Shiva temple is located about 2km to the south of Tirur Railway Station. Thunchan Parambu, the birth place of Thunchath Ramanujan Ezhuthachan, is located in Tirur Town. Although Thrikkandiyoor is now a sleepy village with village folks living out their daily uneventful days, a few centuries ago the village and the surrounding villages were the center great intellectual activities. The location of Thunchan Parambu, the birth place of Thunchath Ramanujan Ezhuthachan (fl. 16th century), who is considered to be the father of Malayalam language, bears testimony to this claim. The legendary poet and grammarian Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri (1560 – 1646) was also a son of these areas. The Thrikkandiyoor village has a prominent place in the history of Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics. Many of the much admired and highly celebrated members of the school flourished in the village or in the immediate geographical areas surrounding the village. The most famous of them all was Kelallur Nilakantha Somayaji (1444 - 1545), author of several treatises on astronomy including his magnum opus Tantrasamgraha. His family house has been traced to the present Etamana house occupied by distant relations after the extinction of Nilakantha’s family. Jyeṣṭhadeva (c.1500 – c.1575), author of Yuktibhasa, was a Nambudiri belonging to the Parangngottu family which still exists in the vicinity of Trikkandiyur. Yuktibhasa has a unique place in the history of mathematics in the whole of India. Firstly, it is a technical book on astronomy and mathematics composed completely in the local language, pure and simple Malayalam. Secondly, it is the first and perhaps the only book on mathematics in a local language which contains complete proofs of all the results stated therein. Thirdly, many of the results stated in the book were discovered in Europe only at least two centuries after Yuktibhasa was composed. Nilakantha Somayaji's student Sankara Variar (c.1500 - c.1560) was also a prominent member of the Kerala school who flourished in Thrikkandiyoor even though his family was employed in the service of a temple at Thrikkutaveli near Ottappalam. Variar's works include a commentary on Nilakantha Somayaji's Tantrasamgraha, a partial commentary on Bhaskara II's Lilavati. Another prominent member of of the school who flourished in Thrikkandiyoor was Achyutha Pisharadi (1550 - 1621) who was a pupil of Jyeshthadeva. His ten or so astronomical works include one composed in 1593. Achyutha Pisharadi was also a teacher of the famous poet and grammarian Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri (1560 – 1646). He was the first known Indian astronomer to specify the conversion of planetary motion on an inclined orbit to motion on the ecliptic. There were several astronomers and mathematicians of the Kerala who lived and worked not far away from Thrikkandiyoor. The greatest of them all was Madhava of Sangamagrama (c.1340 - c.1425) who is believed to have lived in Kudallur, a village about 25km south-east of Thrikkandiyur. Parameshvara Nambudiri (1380 – 1460), the promulgator of the Drgganita system of astronomical computations hailed from Alathiyur, a village about 6km from Thrikkandiyoor. P. P. Divakaran in his scholar work The mathematics in India writes:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Thrikkandiyoor is a village in Tirur Block in Malappuram district of Kerala state in India. The village is known for a Shiva Temple located at the heart of the village. Devotees of Shiva believe that the idol in the temple was installed by Parashurama, the legendary creator of Kerala. It is also believed that this is one of the 108 temples in Kerala constructed under the directions of Parashurama. Another interesting feature of the temple is that there is a clean pond facing the temple, and the area of pond is exactly equal to area of the temple land. The village is adjacent to Tirur Municipal Town and the Shiva temple is located about 2km to the south of Tirur Railway Station. Thunchan Parambu, the birth place of Thunchath Ramanujan Ezhuthachan, is located in Tirur Town.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Although Thrikkandiyoor is now a sleepy village with village folks living out their daily uneventful days, a few centuries ago the village and the surrounding villages were the center great intellectual activities. The location of Thunchan Parambu, the birth place of Thunchath Ramanujan Ezhuthachan (fl. 16th century), who is considered to be the father of Malayalam language, bears testimony to this claim. The legendary poet and grammarian Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri (1560 – 1646) was also a son of these areas.", "title": "Historical importance" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "The Thrikkandiyoor village has a prominent place in the history of Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics. Many of the much admired and highly celebrated members of the school flourished in the village or in the immediate geographical areas surrounding the village. The most famous of them all was Kelallur Nilakantha Somayaji (1444 - 1545), author of several treatises on astronomy including his magnum opus Tantrasamgraha. His family house has been traced to the present Etamana house occupied by distant relations after the extinction of Nilakantha’s family. Jyeṣṭhadeva (c.1500 – c.1575), author of Yuktibhasa, was a Nambudiri belonging to the Parangngottu family which still exists in the vicinity of Trikkandiyur. Yuktibhasa has a unique place in the history of mathematics in the whole of India. Firstly, it is a technical book on astronomy and mathematics composed completely in the local language, pure and simple Malayalam. Secondly, it is the first and perhaps the only book on mathematics in a local language which contains complete proofs of all the results stated therein. Thirdly, many of the results stated in the book were discovered in Europe only at least two centuries after Yuktibhasa was composed. Nilakantha Somayaji's student Sankara Variar (c.1500 - c.1560) was also a prominent member of the Kerala school who flourished in Thrikkandiyoor even though his family was employed in the service of a temple at Thrikkutaveli near Ottappalam. Variar's works include a commentary on Nilakantha Somayaji's Tantrasamgraha, a partial commentary on Bhaskara II's Lilavati. Another prominent member of of the school who flourished in Thrikkandiyoor was Achyutha Pisharadi (1550 - 1621) who was a pupil of Jyeshthadeva. His ten or so astronomical works include one composed in 1593. Achyutha Pisharadi was also a teacher of the famous poet and grammarian Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri (1560 – 1646). He was the first known Indian astronomer to specify the conversion of planetary motion on an inclined orbit to motion on the ecliptic. There were several astronomers and mathematicians of the Kerala who lived and worked not far away from Thrikkandiyoor. The greatest of them all was Madhava of Sangamagrama (c.1340 - c.1425) who is believed to have lived in Kudallur, a village about 25km south-east of Thrikkandiyur. Parameshvara Nambudiri (1380 – 1460), the promulgator of the Drgganita system of astronomical computations hailed from Alathiyur, a village about 6km from Thrikkandiyoor. P. P. Divakaran in his scholar work The mathematics in India writes:", "title": "Historical importance" } ]
Thrikkandiyoor is a village in Tirur Block in Malappuram district of Kerala state in India. The village is known for a Shiva Temple located at the heart of the village. Devotees of Shiva believe that the idol in the temple was installed by Parashurama, the legendary creator of Kerala. It is also believed that this is one of the 108 temples in Kerala constructed under the directions of Parashurama. Another interesting feature of the temple is that there is a clean pond facing the temple, and the area of pond is exactly equal to area of the temple land. The village is adjacent to Tirur Municipal Town and the Shiva temple is located about 2km to the south of Tirur Railway Station. Thunchan Parambu, the birth place of Thunchath Ramanujan Ezhuthachan, is located in Tirur Town.
2023-12-14T16:43:34Z
2023-12-15T10:43:22Z
[ "Template:Location map", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Kerala School", "Template:Malappuram district" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrikkandiyoor
75,564,438
Battle of Moquegua
The Battle of Moquegua (or Moquehua) is a battle of the Peruvian War of Independence, which occurred on 21 January 1823 around the city of Moquegua, between the Liberation Army of Peru, under command of Argentinean General Rudecindo Alvarado, and the Royal Army of Peru under General José de Canterac. The army of the Patriots was almost completely destroyed. After José de San Martín had abandoned Peru in September 1822, command of the United Peruvian army fell to General Rudecindo Alvarado, under whose command the United army was ordered to defeat the bulk of the Royalist troops that were still intact in the south and the country's mountains. In the first days of October, Alvarado's expedition, composed of approximately 4,300 troops and 10 pieces of artillery, sailed from Callao and on 6 December, landed in Arica. Spanish Viceroy José de la Serna, located in Cusco, ordered Brigadier Gerónimo Valdés to immediately march to Arequipa to take command of the troops stationed there, and attack the army of Alvarado.Both armies met at Torata and the Battle of Torata ended in a defeat for the Patriots. After the battle of Torata, the Patriot army retreated to the town of Moquegua with the intention of reorganizing its forces. But the Royalists, knowing that reinforcements under command of General José de Canterac were very close, did not plan to let victory, that was considered certain, slip away. After the arrival of the division of General Canterac, the Royalist army went on the offensive. General-in-Chief José de Canterac divided the Royalist army into two divisions. The first under the orders of Brigadier Valdés was to march hiding behind a hill on the enemy's right. The second divisions, under the command of Brigadier Manuel Monet, was to execute a frontal attack. Meanwhile, General Alvarado's forces remained in Moquegua, with few ammunition and inactive. On 21 January, Canterac advanced and met the Patriots in the Tombolombo pampa, adjacent to the Moquegua River. At 10 in the morning the forces were face to face only separated by the river. Canterac gave the sign for a simultaneous frontal attack by Monet and an enveloping attack by Valdés on the right flank. The patriot defense was overwhelmed and dispersed, giving up the battlefield. As a result, about 700 Patriots were killed, and 1,000 taken prisoner. On the other hand, Royalist casualties totaled 150 dead and 250 wounded. The surviving Patriots retreated to Iquique, where they were attacked by General Olañeta, and lost an other 100 men, before being able to embark at Ilo to return to Lima. The campaign had been a total disaster. Of the initial 4,300 men, only around 1,000 returned to Lima. Many elite troops from Chile had been lost. 17°12′00″S 70°56′00″W / 17.20000°S 70.93333°W / -17.20000; -70.93333
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Battle of Moquegua (or Moquehua) is a battle of the Peruvian War of Independence, which occurred on 21 January 1823 around the city of Moquegua, between the Liberation Army of Peru, under command of Argentinean General Rudecindo Alvarado, and the Royal Army of Peru under General José de Canterac. The army of the Patriots was almost completely destroyed.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "After José de San Martín had abandoned Peru in September 1822, command of the United Peruvian army fell to General Rudecindo Alvarado, under whose command the United army was ordered to defeat the bulk of the Royalist troops that were still intact in the south and the country's mountains.", "title": "Prelude" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In the first days of October, Alvarado's expedition, composed of approximately 4,300 troops and 10 pieces of artillery, sailed from Callao and on 6 December, landed in Arica. Spanish Viceroy José de la Serna, located in Cusco, ordered Brigadier Gerónimo Valdés to immediately march to Arequipa to take command of the troops stationed there, and attack the army of Alvarado.Both armies met at Torata and the Battle of Torata ended in a defeat for the Patriots.", "title": "Prelude" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "After the battle of Torata, the Patriot army retreated to the town of Moquegua with the intention of reorganizing its forces. But the Royalists, knowing that reinforcements under command of General José de Canterac were very close, did not plan to let victory, that was considered certain, slip away. After the arrival of the division of General Canterac, the Royalist army went on the offensive.", "title": "Prelude" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "General-in-Chief José de Canterac divided the Royalist army into two divisions. The first under the orders of Brigadier Valdés was to march hiding behind a hill on the enemy's right. The second divisions, under the command of Brigadier Manuel Monet, was to execute a frontal attack. Meanwhile, General Alvarado's forces remained in Moquegua, with few ammunition and inactive.", "title": "the Battle" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "On 21 January, Canterac advanced and met the Patriots in the Tombolombo pampa, adjacent to the Moquegua River. At 10 in the morning the forces were face to face only separated by the river. Canterac gave the sign for a simultaneous frontal attack by Monet and an enveloping attack by Valdés on the right flank. The patriot defense was overwhelmed and dispersed, giving up the battlefield. As a result, about 700 Patriots were killed, and 1,000 taken prisoner. On the other hand, Royalist casualties totaled 150 dead and 250 wounded.", "title": "the Battle" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "The surviving Patriots retreated to Iquique, where they were attacked by General Olañeta, and lost an other 100 men, before being able to embark at Ilo to return to Lima. The campaign had been a total disaster. Of the initial 4,300 men, only around 1,000 returned to Lima. Many elite troops from Chile had been lost.", "title": "Aftermath" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "17°12′00″S 70°56′00″W / 17.20000°S 70.93333°W / -17.20000; -70.93333", "title": "Links" } ]
The Battle of Moquegua is a battle of the Peruvian War of Independence, which occurred on 21 January 1823 around the city of Moquegua, between the Liberation Army of Peru, under command of Argentinean General Rudecindo Alvarado, and the Royal Army of Peru under General José de Canterac. The army of the Patriots was almost completely destroyed.
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[ "Template:Infobox military conflict", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Coord" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Moquegua
75,564,442
The Power of the Passions and other Poems
The Power of the Passions and other Poems was a 19th-century poetry collection written by Katharine Augusta Ware. A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as: Moving as if her element were air, And music was the echo of her step; and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George: How sweet to stray along thy flowery shore, Where crystals sparkle in the sunny ray; While the red boatman plies his silvery oar To the wild measure of some rustic lay! and these lines, from an allusion to Athens: Views the broad stadium where the gymnic art Nerved the young arm and energized the heart. or this apostrophe to sculpture, from "Musings in St. James's Cemetery": Sculpture, oh, what a triumph o'er the grave Hath thy proud art! thy powerful hand can save From the destroyer's grasp the noble form, As if the spirit dwelt, still thrilling, warm, In every line and feature of the face, The air majestic, and the simple grace Of flowing robes, which shade, but not conceal, All that the classic chisel would reveal. These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Power of the Passions and other Poems was a 19th-century poetry collection written by Katharine Augusta Ware.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "Moving as if her element were air, And music was the echo of her step;", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "How sweet to stray along thy flowery shore, Where crystals sparkle in the sunny ray; While the red boatman plies his silvery oar To the wild measure of some rustic lay!", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "and these lines, from an allusion to Athens:", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Views the broad stadium where the gymnic art Nerved the young arm and energized the heart.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "or this apostrophe to sculpture, from \"Musings in St. James's Cemetery\":", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 8, "text": "Sculpture, oh, what a triumph o'er the grave Hath thy proud art! thy powerful hand can save From the destroyer's grasp the noble form, As if the spirit dwelt, still thrilling, warm, In every line and feature of the face, The air majestic, and the simple grace Of flowing robes, which shade, but not conceal, All that the classic chisel would reveal.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 9, "text": "These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.", "title": "" } ]
The Power of the Passions and other Poems was a 19th-century poetry collection written by Katharine Augusta Ware. A few months before she died, Ware published, in London, a selection from her writings, under the title of The Power of the Passions and other Poems. The composition from which the volume has its principal title was originally printed in the Knickerbocker Magazine, for April in the same year. This, though the longest, is scarcely the best of her productions, but it has passages of consider able strength and boldness, and some felicities of expression. She describes a public dancer, as: and there are many other lines noticable for a picturesque beauty or a fine cadence. In other poems, also, are parts which are much superior to their contexts, as if written in moments of inspiration, and added to in laborious leisure: as the following, from The Diamond Island, which refers to a beautiful place in Lake George: and these lines, from an allusion to Athens: or this apostrophe to sculpture, from "Musings in St. James's Cemetery": These inequalities are characteristic of the larger number of Ware's poems, but there are in her works some pieces marked by a sustained elegance, and deserving of praise for their fancy and feeling as well as for an artist-like finish.
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[ "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite book", "Template:Source-attribution" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_of_the_Passions_and_other_Poems
75,564,474
Rokanuddin Mahmud
Rokanuddin Mahmud is a Bangladeshi lawyer and former Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association president. He is the former vice-chairman of Bangladesh Bar Council. Mahmud was born on 14 July 1946 in Chittagong District, East Bengal, British Raj. He completed his bachelor's and master's of law from the University of Dhaka in 1967. He was called to Lincoln's Inn in 1972. He completed a second master's of law from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. In 1973, Mahmud joined the Bangladesh Bar Council. He started practicing in the Bangladesh Supreme Court in 1975. He worked with Barrister Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed. From 2000 to 2005, Mahmud was affiliated with the International Court of Arbitration. He served two terms as the President of the Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association from 2003 to 2005. In June 2003, he cautiously welcomed the appointment of Justice KM Hasan as the chief justice of Bangladesh superseding two judges, justice M Ruhul Amin and justice Mohammad Fazlul Karim, and asked the government to appoint the most senior judge as the chief justice in the future. He represented former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in a corruption case filed over the purchase of BNS Bangabandhu. He ask lawyers to seize the offices of executive magistrates who send journalists to jail on the orders of government politicians in 2004. In December 2005, Mahmud criticized the government passing an amendment to the Bangladesh Telecommunications Act, 2001 allowing law enforcement officers to eavesdrop phone calls and said that it created the potential for abuse. He criticized the Bangladesh Nationalist Party appointing 17 additional judges to the High Court Division with the input of the chief justice and accused the government of politicizing the judiciary in August 2006. He was the convenor of Peshajibi Samannay Parishad. In November 2006, he rushed to the police station with Barrister Amir-Ul Islam following the arrest of activists of Peshajibi Nari Samaj (Professional Women's Society) who were marching to the Election Commission with a memorandum. From 2004 to 2007, Mahmud was the vice Chairman of the Bangladesh Bar Council. In January 2007, Mahmud was accused of vandalizing the premises of the Supreme Court. Mahmud spoke in favor of 2014 Bangladeshi general election at a hearing in the Bangladesh High Court. He represented Dr Muhammad Yunus in a case challenging the government of Bangladesh removing him from Grameen Bank in 2011. In 2020, Mahmud represented Matiur Rahman, editor of Prothom Alo, in a case filed over the accidental death of college student at a program of the newspaper.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Rokanuddin Mahmud is a Bangladeshi lawyer and former Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association president. He is the former vice-chairman of Bangladesh Bar Council.", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "Mahmud was born on 14 July 1946 in Chittagong District, East Bengal, British Raj. He completed his bachelor's and master's of law from the University of Dhaka in 1967. He was called to Lincoln's Inn in 1972. He completed a second master's of law from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel.", "title": "Early life" }, { "paragraph_id": 2, "text": "In 1973, Mahmud joined the Bangladesh Bar Council. He started practicing in the Bangladesh Supreme Court in 1975. He worked with Barrister Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 3, "text": "From 2000 to 2005, Mahmud was affiliated with the International Court of Arbitration. He served two terms as the President of the Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association from 2003 to 2005. In June 2003, he cautiously welcomed the appointment of Justice KM Hasan as the chief justice of Bangladesh superseding two judges, justice M Ruhul Amin and justice Mohammad Fazlul Karim, and asked the government to appoint the most senior judge as the chief justice in the future. He represented former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in a corruption case filed over the purchase of BNS Bangabandhu. He ask lawyers to seize the offices of executive magistrates who send journalists to jail on the orders of government politicians in 2004.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 4, "text": "In December 2005, Mahmud criticized the government passing an amendment to the Bangladesh Telecommunications Act, 2001 allowing law enforcement officers to eavesdrop phone calls and said that it created the potential for abuse. He criticized the Bangladesh Nationalist Party appointing 17 additional judges to the High Court Division with the input of the chief justice and accused the government of politicizing the judiciary in August 2006. He was the convenor of Peshajibi Samannay Parishad. In November 2006, he rushed to the police station with Barrister Amir-Ul Islam following the arrest of activists of Peshajibi Nari Samaj (Professional Women's Society) who were marching to the Election Commission with a memorandum.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 5, "text": "From 2004 to 2007, Mahmud was the vice Chairman of the Bangladesh Bar Council. In January 2007, Mahmud was accused of vandalizing the premises of the Supreme Court.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 6, "text": "Mahmud spoke in favor of 2014 Bangladeshi general election at a hearing in the Bangladesh High Court. He represented Dr Muhammad Yunus in a case challenging the government of Bangladesh removing him from Grameen Bank in 2011.", "title": "Career" }, { "paragraph_id": 7, "text": "In 2020, Mahmud represented Matiur Rahman, editor of Prothom Alo, in a case filed over the accidental death of college student at a program of the newspaper.", "title": "Career" } ]
Rokanuddin Mahmud is a Bangladeshi lawyer and former Bangladesh Supreme Court Bar Association president. He is the former vice-chairman of Bangladesh Bar Council.
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[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:Authority control" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rokanuddin_Mahmud
75,564,485
Charles B. Lewis (disambiguation)
[]
Charles B. Lewis, american football coach. Charles B. Lewis (athlete), american track and field athlete.
2023-12-14T16:51:15Z
2023-12-14T17:01:14Z
[]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_B._Lewis_(disambiguation)
75,564,492
Faroe Islands women's national volleyball team
The Faroe Islands women's national volleyball team ( Faroese : Føroyska landsliðið í flogbólti hjá kvinnum, Danish : Færøernes damelandsholdet volleyball ) represents Faroe Islands in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches, The Team Ruled and managed by the faroese Volleyball Association that is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV) , The faroese Team also follow two regional European Volleyball Bodies wich are the North European Volleyball Zonal Association (NEVZA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA). The Faroese women's national volleyball team Never managed to Qualify to any major international volleyball Events throughout its history like the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, Olympic Games, European Championship they often Participate in Regional competitions like Small Countries Division Championship their best results in this Tournament was the Third place in two occasions in 2019, 2022.
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "The Faroe Islands women's national volleyball team ( Faroese : Føroyska landsliðið í flogbólti hjá kvinnum, Danish : Færøernes damelandsholdet volleyball ) represents Faroe Islands in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches, The Team Ruled and managed by the faroese Volleyball Association that is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV) , The faroese Team also follow two regional European Volleyball Bodies wich are the North European Volleyball Zonal Association (NEVZA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA).", "title": "" }, { "paragraph_id": 1, "text": "The Faroese women's national volleyball team Never managed to Qualify to any major international volleyball Events throughout its history like the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, Olympic Games, European Championship they often Participate in Regional competitions like Small Countries Division Championship their best results in this Tournament was the Third place in two occasions in 2019, 2022.", "title": "Team History" } ]
The Faroe Islands women's national volleyball team represents Faroe Islands in international women's volleyball competitions and friendly matches, The Team Ruled and managed by the faroese Volleyball Association that is a part of the Federation of International Volleyball (FIVB) as well as the European Volleyball Confederation (CEV) , The faroese Team also follow two regional European Volleyball Bodies wich are the North European Volleyball Zonal Association (NEVZA) and the Small Countries Association (SCA).
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[ "Template:Short description", "Template:Infobox national volleyball team", "Template:Reflist", "Template:Cite web", "Template:National sports teams of the Faroe Islands", "Template:Women's CEV teams" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faroe_Islands_women%27s_national_volleyball_team
75,564,509
Cabinet of Napoleon
Cabinet of Napoleon may refer to:
[ { "paragraph_id": 0, "text": "Cabinet of Napoleon may refer to:", "title": "" } ]
Cabinet of Napoleon may refer to: First Cabinet of Napoleon I First cabinet of Louis Napoleon Second cabinet of Louis Napoleon Third cabinet of Napoleon III Fourth cabinet of Napoleon III
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[ "Template:Disambiguation" ]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_of_Napoleon