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Oldsmobile Alero [SEP] manufacturer
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Oldsmobiles dating from 1897 to 2004. The 1897 Olds, one of four built that year, is on loan from the Smithsonian Institution. There is also a replica of the 1893 steam carriage built by Ransom E. Olds on display, prior to the founding of the Olds Motor Works, which was the official name of Oldsmobile until the 1940s.
This museum also houses automobilia covering nearly a century, including a nearly complete collection of Michigan license plates, early traffic signs and a working 1950s-era traffic signal. A bicycle
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Oldsmobile Alero Alpha
The Oldsmobile Alero Alpha was a 1997 concept car built by Oldsmobile. The Alero Alpha was a 2-door coupe and its design was inspired by the earlier Tube Car and Antares concepts, as well as the Aurora production car. Many of its design elements were seen in the 1999 production version, which was simply called "Alero". Like the Alero Alpha, the Alero was available as a 2-door coupe, plus a 4-door sedan. The Sedan Version was sold under the Chevrolet Brand in several European countries and
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Aechmea conifera [SEP] taxon rank
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Aechmea conifera
Aechmea conifera is a species in the genus "Aechmea". This species is endemic to the State of Bahia in eastern Brazil.
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- Review, Isis, Sep., 1998, vol. 89, no. 3, p. 557
- Review, Taxon, Nov., 1996, vol. 45, no. 4, p. 726
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 2: Texas Family Secrets" (1997)
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 3: Texas Millennium Book" (1999)
- "Gideon Lincecum's Sword: Civil War Letters from the Texas Homefront" (2001)
- Review,
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Allan Frank [SEP] country of citizenship
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Allan Frank
Frederick Allan Frank (born October 24, 1950) is an American singer, songwriter, and performer from Peoria, Illinois.
Biography.
Frank attended Quincy College (now Quincy University) where he earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts in theater. It was there that he developed an interest in songwriting. Following college, he traveled Europe and formed the short-lived band "Deliverance" in Hamburg, Germany. After the disbanding of "Deliverance", he relocated to Los Angeles where he began working
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charging that the Big-4 was operating as a semi-professional league, paying many of its players in secret. He asked that the CAHA declare the Big-4 as a professional circuit and disqualify it from competing for the Allan Cup. Alberta Amateur Hockey Association (AAHA) president Frank Drayton responded to the charges by stating that the Alberta league was one of few in the country operating as true amateurs, and attacked other associations, arguing that both Saskatchewan and Manitoba had submitted illegally professional teams to the Allan Cup tournament.
Although it
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Fred Allen [SEP] member of sports team
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Fred Allen (rugby union)
Sir Frederick Richard Allen (9 February 1920 – 28 April 2012) was a captain and coach of the All Blacks, New Zealand's national rugby union team. The All Blacks won all 14 of the test matches they played under his coaching.
Personal life.
Allen was born in Oamaru, New Zealand. He was educated in Christchurch (though he did not attend secondary school), and played for the Linwood club. After captaining the Canterbury Colts in 1938, he
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Fred Jones (linebacker, born 1977)
Fred Allen Jones Jr. (born October 18, 1977) is a former American football linebacker who played four seasons in the National Football League with the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs. He played college football at the University of Colorado Boulder and attended St. Augustine High School in San Diego, California. He was also a member of the Frankfurt Galaxy of NFL Europe.
External links.
- Just Sports Stats
- Career transactions
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Mordellina atrofusca [SEP] taxon rank
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Mordellina atrofusca
Mordellina atrofusca is a species of beetle in the genus "Mordellina". It was described in 1951.
The Latin specific epithet "atrofusca" refers to dark-swarthy, dark-brown coloured, atro-fuscus.
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- Review, Isis, Sep., 1998, vol. 89, no. 3, p. 557
- Review, Taxon, Nov., 1996, vol. 45, no. 4, p. 726
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 2: Texas Family Secrets" (1997)
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 3: Texas Millennium Book" (1999)
- "Gideon Lincecum's Sword: Civil War Letters from the Texas Homefront" (2001)
- Review,
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Postcards from God [SEP] composer
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Postcards from God
Postcards from God - The Sister Wendy Musical is a British musical with songs, lyrics and book by Marcus Reeves, based on the life and works of Sister Wendy Beckett, the noted art critic and nun of the order of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur.
"Postcards from God" began as a series of cabaret performances at Battersea Arts Centre in 2004 and is the story of art expert and writer Sister Wendy Beckett (born February 25, 1930) who became somewhat of a media sensation
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Charlotte W. Hawes
Charlotte White Hawes (7 February 1840 - 5 Sep 1926) was an American composer, lecturer, music educator, poet and critic from Massachusetts. "God Bless the Soldier", written in 1890, was dedicated to the Grand Army of the Republic.
Early years and education.
Born in Wrentham, Massachusetts, she was of Puritan ancestry, her ancestors on the father's side having settled in Massachusetts in 1635. A large part of her early education was received in at home. She
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All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1939 [SEP] sport
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1939 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
The 1939 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship was the high point of the 1939 season in Camogie. The championship was won by Cork, who defeated Galway by a 15-point margin in the final.
Semi-final.
The exclusion of All Ireland champions Dublin in a dispute over the ban on hockey players (in practice the All Ireland championship was organised by the National Camógaíocht Association while Dublin remained in the old Association with support from Kildare and clubs in Meath and Wicklow) was
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Angus Scott – ITV Sport 1997–2007
- Bill Seward – NBC Rugby World Cup 2011
- Nigel Starmer-Smith – BBC Sport 1973–2002, ITV Sport 2003–2006
- Peter Stringer – TV3 Ireland 2015 & 2018–present
- John Taylor – ITV Sport 1991–2007, talkSPORT 2005 & 2011–2013
- Gareth Thomas – ITV Sport 2011–present
- Teddy Wakelam – BBC Sport 1927–1939
- Paul Wallace – ITV Sport 2003, TV3 Ireland 2007, Sky Sports 2007–present
- Tony Ward – RTE Sport 1999–present
- Peter West – BBC Sport
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Patrick H. Hart [SEP] conflict
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Patrick H. Hart
Patrick Henry Hart (31 May 1915 - 4 June 1942) was a United States Navy officer and Naval Aviator who served in World War II.
Biography.
Hart was born 31 May 1915 in New York City and graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1937. Hart served on board "Colorado" (BB-45) and "West Virginia" (BB-48) before becoming a naval aviator in 1940.
Appointed Lieutenant in 1942, he was killed while a member of Torpedo Squadron 3 at
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"
- Moss Hart (1904–1961), American playwright
N.
- Nancy Hart (1735–1830), American Revolutionary figure
O.
- Oliver Hart (disambiguation)
- Ossian B. Hart (1821–1874), Florida governor
- Owen Hart (1965–1999), Canadian professional wrestler
P.
- Patrick H. Hart (1915–1942), US naval officer
- Patrick G. Hart (b. 1965), TV host and recording artist
- Paul Hart (born 1953), English football player and manager
-
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Crazy About You [SEP] performer
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Crazy About You (Minimoni song)
"Crazy About You" is the tenth single of the Morning Musume subgroup Minimoni. It was released on October 16, 2003 and sold 36,473 copies. It peaked at number five on the Oricon Charts in Japan.
Track listing.
All tracks are written and composed by Tsunku.
1. "Crazy About You"
Featured lineup.
- Mika Todd
- Nozomi Tsuji
- Ai Kago
- Ai Takahashi
External links.
- "Crazy About
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, 2011, and later in the United States on May 10, 2011.
On speaking about the song, Sparks said "I Am Woman is a song about different aspects of the lives of women. It could be a mother, a performer, a woman working in a corporate space — it's all about what we go through as women and how our lives are so crazy. Walk a mile in my shoes, or in my stilettos, if you dare and see what happens. It's all about the
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Shawna Kenney [SEP] occupation
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Shawna Kenney
Shawna Kenney (born August 4, 1969) is an American author and journalist.
Kenney was born in Auburn, New York. She authored the memoir "I Was a Teenage Dominatrix" (Last Gasp) at the age of 29. The book developed an underground cult following, receiving a Firecracker Alternative Book Award in 2000, with translations published in Italy and the UK. Kenney's personal essays appear in several anthologies, most notably "Without a Net: The Female Experience of Growing Up Working Class
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author who donated her life's work of more than 100,000 images to the Library of Congress, which established a rare one-person archive for her work
- Jesse Itzler – "Billboard" Hot 100 rapper; Vice chairman of Marquis Jet, BA
- Ronald Jensen – mathematician active in Europe, working in mathematical logic and set theory, CAS/BA '59
- Robert Kagan – Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Scholar and "The Washington Post" columnist, PhD
- Shawna Kenney – author of "I
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Peter M. Rhee [SEP] occupation
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Peter M. Rhee
Peter Meong Rhee (born September 18, 1961) is an American surgeon, medical professor, and military veteran. During his 24 years in the United States Navy, Rhee served as a battlefield casualty physician in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Formerly a Professor of Surgery and the Chief of Trauma, Critical Care, and Burn and Emergency Surgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine until 2016, he now serves as the Chief of Acute Care Surgery and as Medical Director of the Marcus Trauma Center at Grady
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Rhee
Rhee may refer to:
- A common Korean surname, Lee (Korean name), which is also commonly transliterated as Rhee or Yi
- Several people bearing the Korean surname, as noted at List of people with the Korean family name Lee
- A village in the Netherlands named Rhee (Drenthe)
People.
- Margaret Rhee, American feminist poet
- Michelle Rhee, American educator and former Chancellor of the District of Columbia school system
- Peter M. Rhee, American physician and US
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Rivers and Tides [SEP] cast member
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Rivers and Tides
Rivers and Tides is a 2001 documentary film directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer about the British artist Andy Goldsworthy, who creates intricate and ephemeral sculptures from natural materials such as rocks, leaves, flowers, and icicles. The music was composed and performed by Fred Frith and was released on a soundtrack, "Rivers and Tides (2003)".
The film received a number of awards, including the ‘Best Documentary’ awards of the San Diego Film Critics Society and the San Francisco Film Critics Circle. It
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Rivers Without Borders
Rivers Without Borders is a nonprofit organization fiscally sponsored by the Tides Center in the United States. Rivers Without Borders works as a project of Tides Canada Initiatives in Canada. Tides Canada's mission is to provide uncommon solutions for the common good by leading and supporting actions that foster a healthy environment and just Canadian society.
Rivers Without Borders promotes a watershed-based conservation vision for the Transboundary Watershed Region of Southeast Alaska and northwest British Columbia. In a time of declining wild salmon populations, diminishing biodiversity,
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Bruno de Heceta [SEP] languages spoken, written or signed
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Bruno de Heceta
Bruno de Heceta (Hezeta) y Dudagoitia (1743–1807) was a Spanish Basque explorer of the Pacific Northwest. Born in Bilbao of an old Basque family, he was sent by the Viceroy of New Spain, Antonio María Bucareli y Ursúa, to explore the area north of Alta California in response to information that there were colonial Russian settlements there.
Background.
The Spanish claim to Alaska and the Pacific Northwest had dated back to a 1493 papal bull ("Inter caetera") and rights contained
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: April 18
- Good Friday: April 19
- Holy Saturday: April 20
Easter Week: April 21–27
- Easter: April 21 (Eastertide begins)
- Aberri Eguna (Basque)
- Lieldienas (Latvia)
Sunday before Earth Day (April 22): April 21
- Earth Day Sunday
- Easter Monday: April 22
- Family Day (South Africa)
- Śmigus-Dyngus, regional variant of Easter Monday (Poland, Ukraine)
- Easter Tuesday: April
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Stonewall Jackson [SEP] country of citizenship
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Stonewall Jackson (musician)
Stonewall Jackson (born November 6, 1932) is an American country singer, guitarist and musician who achieved his greatest fame during country's "golden" honky tonk era in the 1950s and early 1960s.
Biography.
Biography Early years.
Jackson, born in Tabor City, North Carolina, is the youngest of three children. Stonewall is not a nickname; he was named after the Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson. Some publicity for the singer claimed he was a descendant of
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in honor of Confederate General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson. While at Camp Jackson, much of the division training was conducted in the vicinity of Wildcat Creek. Furthermore, some more daring country boys in uniform trapped a Carolina wildcat near the creek, and adopted the snarling beast as the division mascot. For those reasons, the division adopted a wildcat as their unique insignia. The wildcat proved so popular with the members of the division that the "Stonewall" nickname was quickly supplanted. The cat symbol and the motto "Obedience
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Young at Heart [SEP] part of the series
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Young at Heart (The X-Files)
"Young at Heart" is the sixteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series "The X-Files". It premiered on the Fox network on February 11, 1994. It was written by Scott Kaufer and series creator Chris Carter, and directed by Michael Lange. The episode featured guest appearances by Dick Anthony Williams, William B. Davis and Alan Boyce, and saw Jerry Hardin reprise his role as Deep Throat. The episode is a "
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1040 Ray Martin and his Concert Orchestra At Last! At Last! / Dancing Bells Apr-52
- P. 1041 Jimmy Young Kiss Of Fire / Faith May-52
- P. 1042 Jimmy Young Be Anything (But Be Mine) / Love, Where Are You Now May-52
- P. 1043 Petula Clark The Card / It Had To Be You May-52
- P. 1044 Annette Klooger Baby You're Wrong / So Madly In Love Sep-52
- P. 1045 Dennis Lotis Here In My Heart / Take My Heart Sep-52
- P. 1046
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Kapella River [SEP] instance of
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Kapella River
The Kapella River is a river in the Kitimat Ranges of the Coast Mountains in British Columbia, Canada. It rises west of Cornice Peak and flows northwest to join the Kitlope River.
See also.
- Capella (disambiguation)
- List of rivers of British Columbia
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responsibilities granted to certain army commanders. Crown Prince Wilhelm for instance, was simultaneously commander of the 5th Army and Army Group German Crown Prince from August 1915 to November 1916.
All eight German army groups were named after their commanders.
- Army Group Mackensen (Poland) (22 Apr 1915 - 8 Sep 1915)
- Army Group Linsingen (8 Sep 1915 - 31 Mar 1918)
- Army Group Eichhorn-Kiev (31 Mar 1918 - 30 Apr 1918)
- Army Group Eichhorn (30 Apr
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Emma Louise [SEP] occupation
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Scout Niblett
Emma Louise Niblett (born 29 September 1973), better known by the stage name Scout Niblett, is an English singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist. Niblett debuted in 2001 with her first full-length studio album "Sweet Heart Fever", and has gone on to release five more studio albums. In 2013, Niblett released her sixth studio album, "It's Up to Emma", which she mixed and produced.
Niblett's music is frequently minimalist in style, many of her
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all died in the London cholera epidemics. Upon arriving in York, Goodson was immediately faced with another cholera epidemic, one which would take the life of his wife, Emma (recent research has shown an Emma Goodson living at St George the Martyr, Southwark, London, in the 1841 Census her occupation being 'Musical Professor'. She is living here with her brother in law, James Adcock, and her elder sister Sophia Louise Adcock- née Clark). Historical documents estimate that this particular epidemic killed approximately 1,000 people.
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White Deer High School [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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White Deer High School
White Deer High School is a public high school located in White Deer, Texas (USA) and classified as a 1A school by the UIL. It is part of the White Deer Independent School District located in east central Carson County. In 2015, the school was rated "Met Standard" by the Texas Education Agency.
Athletics.
The White Deer Bucks compete in these sports -
- Basketball
- Cross Country
- Football
- Golf
- Powerlifting
- Tennis
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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2014–15 in Azerbaijani football [SEP] sport
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2014–15 in Azerbaijani football
The 2014-15 season will be the 24th season of competitive association football in Azerbaijan.
External links.
- pfl.az
- AFFA
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Fariz Mammadov
Fariz Mammadov () (born April 15, 1980 Aghdam, USSR) is an Azerbaijani professional boxer and current European welterweight champion with the World Boxing Organization.
Professional career.
On 4 June 2014, he gained the European welterweight title in the WBO after knocking out Matthias Pelk of Germany.
Personal life.
Aside from the sport, he served 7 years in prison on various assault charges. He has been practicing Islam since he was around the age of 25.
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Yıldız Kaplan [SEP] genre
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Yıldız Kaplan
Yıldız Kaplan (born October 28, 1970, Bafra, Turkey) is a Turkish actress, fashion model, and pop singer.
Biography.
She was born in Bafra, Samsun Province in 1970. Although she is mainly a model and singer, she has also acted in a number of films and TV series.
Discography.
- "Gönül Borcu" (2002) (September 10, 2002)
- "Işıl Işıl" (2005) (June 10, 2005)
-
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Yelda Reynaud
- Yeşim Büber
- Yetkin Dikinciler
- Yıldız Kaplan
- Yıldız Kenter
- Yılmaz Erdoğan
- Yılmaz Güney
- Yiğit Özşener
Z.
- Zeki Alasya
- Zeki Müren
- Zeynep Değirmencioğlu
- Zuhal Olcay
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West India Lights [SEP] genre
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West India Lights
West India Lights is a collection of fantasy and horror short stories by American writer Henry S. Whitehead. It was released in 1946 and was the second collection of the author's stories to be published by Arkham House. It was published in an edition of 3,037 copies.
Most of the stories had originally appeared in the magazines "Weird Tales", "Strange Tales", and "Amazing Stories".
Contents.
"West India Lights" contains the following tales:
1. "
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learning, writing and scholarship”, in an article that draws from Prabhu's experience of designing and teaching a medical humanities course in an Indian classroom of literature students.
A reflective piece about the reception of the memoir was written by Prabhu and published in The Economic and Political Weekly in Sep 2018, about the challenges of the memoir genre in India, the experience of disclosing sexual abuse in/ to the family, and the author's take on why a public telling matters.
Awards and recognition.
Receiving recognition for
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I Don't Believe You [SEP] country of origin
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I Don't Believe You
"I Don't Believe You" is a song by American recording artist Pink. It was released as the sixth single from her fifth studio album, "Funhouse".
Background.
"I Don't Believe You" is set in common time and played in the key of A-flat major. The guitar and piano are used for the background music, while Pink's voice follows the A♭ —Fm7—Cm—D♭—A♭ chord progression. Pink explained on her website
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the Croatian national kickboxing team, his request was approved. The colonel told Filipović: I don't think you will be a special soldier, but I believe you will be a good fighter one day. So you don't have to learn [with the radio telegraphists]. I release you and I want you to train twice a day. And I want you to make your country and your homeland proud one day. Filipović described this as one of the best days of his life. After this, he embarked on
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Simon House [SEP] place of birth
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Simon House
Simon House (born 29 August 1948 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England) is a composer and classically trained violinist and keyboard player, perhaps best known for his work with space rock band Hawkwind. His arrival in 1974 introduced a new element to the band's style. He was the first conspicuously trained musician to join, and the sound that emerged on "Hall of the Mountain Grill" was a previously unheard, lush chaos which sounded a little like Black Sabbath meets The Moody Blues.
Before Hawkwind,
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Godinton
Godinton (sometimes known as Godinton Park) is a suburb of Ashford, Kent in England, with its stately home Godinton House within its outskirts. Simon Aglony, also known as Sagarat, once lived here.
Demography.
At the 2001 UK census, the Godinton electoral ward had a population of 3,933. The ethnicity was 97.1% white, 0.7% mixed race, 1.6% Asian, 0.3% black and 0.3% other. The place of birth of residents was 93.3% United Kingdom, 0.8%
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Charles McKinley [SEP] sport
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Charles McKinley
Charles Albert McKinley (13 September 1902 – 1983) was an English professional football outside forward who played in the Football League for Charlton Athletic and Brentford. He remained an amateur prior to joining Brentford.
Honours.
Leyton
- FA Amateur Cup: 1927–28
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Chuck McKinley
Charles Robert McKinley Jr. (January 5, 1941 – August 10, 1986) was an American former world no. 1 men's amateur tennis champion of the 1960s. He is remembered as an undersized, hard-working dynamo, whose relentless effort and competitive spirit led American tennis to the top of the sport during a period heavily dominated by Australians.
McKinley won the 1963 Men's Singles Championship at Wimbledon, and as a result was ranked World No. 1 by some journalists. He paired with Dennis
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Orsonville [SEP] instance of
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Orsonville
Orsonville is a commune in the Yvelines department in the Île-de-France region in north-central France.
See also.
- Communes of the Yvelines department
References.
- INSEE
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signed a co-naming sponsorship deal with the team.
Route.
The route of the 2018 Paris–Nice was announced on 9 January 2018.
Stages.
Stages Stage 1.
- 4 March 2018 — Chatou to Meudon,
Stages Stage 2.
- 5 March 2018 — Orsonville to Vierzon,
Stages Stage 3.
- 6 March 2018 — Bourges to Châtel-Guyon,
Stages Stage 4.
- 7 March 2018 — La Fouillouse to Saint-Étienne, , individual
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Zoran Predin [SEP] place of birth
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Zoran Predin
Zoran Predin (born 16 June 1958) is a Slovenian singer-songwriter from Maribor. In the 1980s, he was the front man of the folk-rock band "Lačni Franz". He also writes music for film, television, and theatre.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, he went on several tours with the rock singers Pero Lovšin and Vlado Kreslin. Among others, they composed the anthem of the Slovenia national football team for the 2000 European Football Championship.
He has also
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player
- Zoran Predin, Slovenian musician
- Zoran Radmilović, Serbian actor
- Zoran Radović, Serbian basketball player
- Zoran Rankić, Serbian actor
- Zoran Rant, Slovenian scientist
- Zoran Redžić, Bosnian musician
- Zoran Savić, Serbian basketball player
- Zoran Simjanović, Serbian musician
- Zoran Simović, Montenegrin football player
- Zoran Stanković, Serbian politician
- Zoran Stojković, Serbian politician
- Zorán Sztevanovity (Zoran Stefanović), Serbian-Hungarian musician
- Zoran Šami, Serbian
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Archibald Meston [SEP] occupation
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Archibald Meston
Archibald Meston (26 March 1851 – 11 March 1924) was an Australian politician, civil servant, journalist, naturalist and explorer.
Personal life.
Archibald Meston was born at Towie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, the son of Alexander Meston.
Meston migrated with his parents to Sydney in 1859, his family subsequently taking up farming at Ulmarra, New South Wales on the Clarence River.
Meston married Margaret Frances Prowse Shaw in Sydney on 22 August 1871.
After a long and varied career,
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Meston
Meston is a family name. It may refer to:
- Alexander Meston (1898–1980), English cricketer
- Archibald Meston (1851–1924), Australian explorer
- Baron Meston, title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom
- James Meston, 1st Baron Meston (1865-1943), British civil servant, financial expert and businessman
- Cindy Meston, Canadian clinical psychologist and professor
- Daja Wangchuk Meston (born 1970), American author and Tibet activist
- John Meston (1914–1979)
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Clachnaben [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Clachnaben
Clachnaben (archaically "Cloch-na'bain"; Scottish Gaelic: "Clach na Beinne") is a 589-metre hill in Glen Dye, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. It is a distinctive hill visible from many points on Lower Deeside and is topped with a large granite tor. "Clachnaben" is the war cry of Clan Strachan.
Geography.
A popular walk starts at the car park on the Cairn O' Mounth (Banchory–Fettercairn) road, 10 kilometres south of Banchory. Popularity has caused some
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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General Hospital [SEP] original language of film or TV show
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Terri Hawkes
Teresa Anne "Terri" Hawkes (born January 31, 1958) is a Canadian actress known for playing Kelly Hennenlotter in the horror film, "", Adrienne in "Beverly Hills 90210", Wendy Masters in "General Hospital", and for being the second English dub voice actress of the title character in the original English dub of the Japanese anime "Sailor Moon". She is the daughter of politician Jim Hawkes.
Hawkes' other voice acting roles include Baby Hugs Bear in "The Care
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sealed to keep smoke in and air out. Lydia Quezada is credited for the black variation. She says she learned how to do it when she accidentally sealed the chamber for a polychrome pot, creating black clouds. The effect prompted her to experiment.
Mata Ortiz pottery pieces are made for their aesthetic value and use pre Hispanic pottery only as inspiration, not as a means of continuing a folk-art tradition. The painted designed is where the artistic variation is most evident and skill levels vary greatly. Some potters stick
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Faisal bin Fahd [SEP] country of citizenship
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Faisal bin Fahd
Faisal bin Fahd (1945 – 21 August 1999) was the president of Youth Welfare in Saudi Arabia from 1975 to 1999 and a member of House of Saud.
Early life and education.
Faisal bin Fahd was born in 1945. He was the eldest son of King Fahd. His mother, Al Anoud bint Abdulaziz bin Musaid, is from the bin Jiluwi branch of the Al Saud whose members intermarried with the members of the House of Saud. She was younger sister of one of Prince Sultan
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the Royal Family and some international leaders, came to the event. Due to its success, the exhibition will become a permanent part of the King Fahd museum at the King Fahd Foundation.
Exile.
Hours after the reported death of Prince Abdul Aziz bin Fahd, claims that his nephew Turki fled the country surfaced. He was speculated to have fled to Iran.
This was all proven false after prince Turki bin Mohammed bin Fahad was seen at the funeral of his cousin Mansour bin Megren with other family members the
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The 69 Eyes [SEP] genre
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X (The 69 Eyes album)
X (as in the Roman numeral for 10) is the name of the tenth studio album by gothic rock band The 69 Eyes. The band chose "Red" as their first single. Days before the release of "X", they released "Borderline" as their second single.
"Rosary Blue", a bonus track, features vocals by American tattoo artist Kat Von D.
Reception.
The "Blistering" magazine marked a "versatile" mix of styles
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– Jan 68 Company Commander, Infantry Training Center, Fort Benning, GA
- Jan 68 – Sep 68 Student, Infantry Officer Advance Course, Infantry School, Fort Benning, GA
- Sep 68 – Dec 68 Company Commander, 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam
- Dec 68 – Sep 69 Battalion S-3 (Operations) Officer, 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam
- Sep 69 – Oct 69 Brigade S-3 (Operations) Officer, 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam
- Dec 69 – Jan 72 Graduate Student, Tulane University
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Lorin Levee [SEP] country of citizenship
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Lorin Levee
Lorin Levee (8 July 1950 – 22 February 2012) was an American clarinetist.
Levee studied clarinet at De Paul University. He played clarinet in the Grant Park Symphony, the Chicago Lyric Opera Orchestra, the Chicago Chamber Orchestra, and the American Ballet Theater Orchestra. He was on the faculty of De Paul University for 3 years.
He was also principal clarinetist for the Colorado Music Festival and the Teton Festival. He joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1976 on bass clarinet, becoming principal clarinetist in
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and Products Database (CPDat).
Scope and Access.
The CompTox Chemicals Dashboard database contains high quality chemical structures and information that have been extensively curated and quality checked, which can be used as a resource for analytical scientists involved in structure identification.
The Chemicals Dashboard can be accessed via a web interface or sets of data within it can be downloaded for use offline. The Lists tab can be used to browse and download groups of related chemicals based on their relevance to a specific research topic (such as additives
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Andy Gardner [SEP] sport
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Andy Gardner (footballer, born 1877)
Andrew Gardner (17 April 1877 – after 1908) was a Scottish professional footballer who made 48 appearances in the English Football League playing as an outside left for Grimsby Town, Newcastle United and Bolton Wanderers. He also played for Scottish League club Clyde and for Southern League clubs Brighton & Hove Albion, where he was top scorer in 1904–05 with 13 goals in all competitions, and Queens Park Rangers. Gardner was born in Oban, Scotland.
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arts practice
He developed a new performance piece 'Anniversary' in collaboration with West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds in 2016.
In 2017 Lyddiard toured across Asia making work in Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Singapore.
External links.
- Web site
Lyn Gardner on Lyddiard's Northern Stage: https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2000/sep/27/artsfeatures
- http://www.heraldscotland.com/sport/spl/aberdeen/dodin-s-solution-being-at-a-loss-1.766359
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Erich Jacoby [SEP] place of birth
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Erich Jacoby
Erich Roman Ludvig Jacoby (16 June 1885 in Tallinn, Estonia – 10 December 1941 in Gdynia, Poland) was an Estonian architect of Baltic German descent.
E.Jacoby is one of the first ten leading architects of Estonian professional architecture, being the founding member of the Estonian Architectural Association (1921)
Influenced the Estonian architectural culture significantly through its creative and institutional activities.
Erich Jacoby was born in Tallinn as a son of the town engineer Carl Gustav Jacoby. He studied architecture at the Hanover University of
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A Night in May
A Night in May (German: Eine Nacht im Mai) is a 1938 German comedy film directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Marika Rökk, Viktor Staal and Karl Schönböck.
It was made by UFA the leading German studio. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Erich Grave and Max Mellin. Some location filming took place around Wannsee.
Main cast.
- Marika Rökk as Inge Fleming
- Viktor Staal as Willy Prinz
- Karl Schönböck as Waldemar Becker
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Saint Kitts and Nevis at the 2000 Summer Olympics [SEP] country
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France at the 1972 Winter Olympics
France competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan.
Alpine skiing.
- Men
- Men's slalom
- Women
Biathlon.
- Men
- Men's 4 x 7.5 km relay
Cross-country skiing.
- Men
- Men's 4 × 10 km relay
Figure skating.
- Men
- Pairs
Luge.
- Men
Nordic combined.
Events:
- normal hill ski jumping
-
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Saint Kitts and Nevis at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Saint Kitts and Nevis competed in the Olympic Games for the first time at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, United States. The country sent ten athletes to compete, all in the sport of athletics. None of the athletes received a medal.
Background.
Saint Kitts and Nevis Amateur Athletics Association was formed in 1977 and joined the International Olympic Committee in 1993. Prior to the Olympics, Kim Collins earned a bronze medal at the CARIFTA Games in the men's
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Jet d'Eau [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Jet d'Eau
The Jet d'Eau (, "Water-Jet") is a large fountain in Geneva, Switzerland, and is one of the city's most famous landmarks, being featured on the city's official tourism web site and on the official logo for Geneva's hosting of the 2008 UEFA Championships. Situated at the point where Lake Geneva empties into the Rhône, it is visible throughout the city and from the air, even when flying over Geneva at an altitude of .
History.
The first Jet d'Eau
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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Ko Hyung-Jin [SEP] sport
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Ko Hyung-jin
Ko Hyung-jin (고형진; born 20 June 1982) is a South Korean football referee. He has been a full international referee for FIFA.
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Kim Seung-woo, Lee Ha-na, Jang Dong-gun, Ji Jin-hee and Hwang Jung-min; single; 2010)
- "Do It For You" ( feat. Gong Hyung-jin, Suho and Ko Woo-ri; 2011)
- "Our Love Shines" (Kim Joo-hyuk, Lee Si-young, Gong Hyung-jin, Lee Yoon-ji and Oh Jung-se; "Couples" OST; 2011)
External links.
-
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John Jacques, Baron Jacques [SEP] occupation
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John Jacques, Baron Jacques
John Henry Jacques, Baron Jacques (11 January 1905 – 20 December 1995) was a British businessman and politician for the Co-operative Party.
Background.
Born in Ashington, he was the son of Thomas Dobsons Jacques, a miner and Ann Jaques, (née Bircham) A scholarship led him to the Co-operative College, located in Manchester, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in commerce. He then went to Low Moorsley as a secretary-manager of its
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- Swordsman (Jacques Duquesne)
- Terrax the Tamer
Membership Legion of the Unliving III.
"Avengers West Coast" #61 (Aug. 1990)
- Black Knight (Nathan Garrett)
- Grim Reaper
- Iron Man 2020
- Left Winger and Right Winger
- Oort the Living Comet
- Swordsman
- Toro
Membership Legion of the Unliving IV.
"Avengers" #353 (Sep. 1992)
- Amenhotep - An ancient vampire
- Baron Heinrich Zemo
- Count Nefaria
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Coles [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Coles, Illinois
Coles is an unincorporated community in Coles County, Illinois, United States. Coles is northwest of Mattoon.
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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Dan Jorgensen [SEP] participant in
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Dan Jorgensen (swimmer)
Daniel Ploug Jorgensen (born April 4, 1968) is an American former competition swimmer who represented the United States at two consecutive Olympic Games.
At the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, he earned a gold medal by swimming for the winning U.S. team in the men's 4×200-meter freestyle relay. Individually, he also competed in the B Final of the men's 400-meter freestyle and finished fourteenth overall (3:55.34).
Four years later at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona,
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had been pulled from the bout and be a participant in the UFC's inaugural Flyweight tournament in March. Wineland was then expected to face Johnny Bedford. However, Wineland himself was forced out of the bout with an injury and replaced by promotional newcomer Mitch Gagnon.
Wineland next faced Scott Jorgensen on June 8, 2012 at . Wineland defeated Jorgenson via second-round knockout, notable for the fact it marked the first time the durable Jorgensen had been stopped via KO. The performance earned both participants "Fight of the Night
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Under the Tonto Rim [SEP] author
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Under the Tonto Rim (novel)
Under the Tonto Rim is a Western novel by Zane Grey first published in book form by Harper & Brothers in 1926. Prior to publication of the book the story had been serialized in 1925 as "The Bee Hunter" in "Ladies' Home Journal" (Feb–May 1925).
The book tells the story of a young lady, Lucy Watson, the daughter of a saloon-keeper. After her father's death Lucy takes a newly created position as Welfare Instructor
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Hillie worked in health care administration for several years. She was later the United States representative for English author Barbara Cartland. She died in 1997 in Fairfield, Connecticut from a stroke.
Selected filmography.
- "Madame Butterfly" (1932) - Bridesmaid (uncredited)
- "From Hell to Heaven" (1933) - Sonnie Lockwood
- "Under the Tonto Rim" (1933) - Nina Weston
- "Man of the Forest" (1933) - Alice Gayner
- "Duck Soup
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Lisenser Fernerkogel [SEP] country
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Lisenser Fernerkogel
The Lisenser Fernerkogel (or Lüsener Fernerkogel) is a mountain in the Stubai Alps of Austria.
Routes.
From the Franz Senn Hütte hut it is approximately 3½ hours mostly over glaciers and snow, with a small (100 m) easy rock scramble at the end.
Close to, and can be combined with, the Rotgratspitze and Lisenser Spitze.
External links.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20040129125605/http://www324.ws1.inname.net/bergtouren/touren_tirol/stubaier_alpen/fernerkogel/fernerkogel.htm - in German
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's average total for July by 50%, where it saw fall in a 12-hour period on July 5. Landslides were recorded in 44 different locations and flooding in 38 locations. As of August 5, the death toll has been placed at 36, with five unaccounted for.
The name "Nanmadol" was contributed to the western Pacific typhoon naming list by Micronesia. It is named after Nan Madol, a famous Pohnpei ruin that is deemed as the "Venice of the Pacific".
Meteorological history.
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Cienfuegos Elefantes [SEP] league
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Cienfuegos (baseball)
Cienfuegos is a baseball team in the Cuban National Series. Based in the southern city of Cienfuegos, the "Camaroneros" had their best season in their second year of existence, finishing fourth in the National Series. They have never come close to replicating that success.
The "Camaroneros" had two pitchers on Cuba's team at the 2006 World Baseball Classic: Adiel Palma and Yosvany Pérez.
Current roster.
- Catchers: Osvaldo Arias, Adir Ferrán, Camilche Veloz, Edelkis Reyes
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Elefantes de Cienfuegos
- Cuban League: Elefantes de Cienfuegos
- Dominican Republic League: Leones del Escogido
- Mexican Pacific League: Tomateros de Culiacán
- Panamanian League: Chesterfield Smokers
- Puerto Rican League: Criollos de Caguas
- Venezuelan League: Industriales de Valencia
Awards and honors.
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Hank Greenberg
- Joe Cronin
- Most Valuable Player
- National League – Don Newcombe, Brooklyn Dodgers
- American League – Mickey Mantle, New York Yankees
-
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2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup [SEP] sport
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Paraguay men's national under-17 football team
The Paraguay national under-17 football team represents Paraguay in international football competitions such as FIFA U-17 World Cup and South American Under-17 Football Championship.
Overview.
The under-17 Paraguay national football team has seen and delivered along the years many of Paraguay's best talents.
The team has participated in 4 events of the FIFA U-17 World Cup and their best performance came in the 1999 World Cup held in New Zealand, when Paraguay reached the quarterfinals and finished in 5th place. Their best performance
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by 25,037 secondary school students, making it the fourth-most popular sport behind netball, rugby union and basketball.
New Zealand hosted the 1999 FIFA U-17 World Cup, the inaugural FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in 2008 and the 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
Other sports.
Other sports Athletics (track and field).
Athletics is New Zealand's second-most successful Olympic sport with 24 medals, of which 10 have been gold. Arthur Porritt was New Zealand's first Olympic athletic medallist, winning bronze
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Ranald MacDougall [SEP] country of citizenship
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The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1959 film)
The World, the Flesh and the Devil is a 1959 American science fiction doomsday film written and directed by Ranald MacDougall. The film stars Harry Belafonte, who was then at the peak of his film career. The film is set in a post-apocalyptic world with very few human survivors. It is based on two sources: the novel "The Purple Cloud" by M. P. Shiel and the story "End of the World" by Ferdinand Reyher.
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off the project by Wald and assigned to something else. The job of writing the story and screenplay was given to Cole and a new writer for film, Ranald MacDougall. MacDougall had been a creator and co-writer of the CBS radio series "The Man Behind the Gun" that was awarded a 1942 Peabody Award. He had been contracted to Warner Brothers, with this his second film after uncredited work on "Pride of the Marines". "Ranald was a pleasure to work with," wrote Cole later,
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Slater and Gordon [SEP] instance of
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Slater and Gordon Lawyers
Slater and Gordon is a law firm in Australia and the UK. The firm was founded in Melbourne, Victoria in 1935 by a barrister and solicitor from Irymple, Victoria, Hugh Lyons Gordon, and Labor politician Bill Slater.
The firm is one of Australia's largest consumer law firms, and in May 2007, the firm incorporated and was one of the first law firms in the world to go public when its shares were quoted on the Australian Securities Exchange. In 2012, Slater and Gordon
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Assistant General Manager: Moisés Rodríguez (promoted to Asst. GM on Sep. 27, 2017)
- Director, Player Development: Gary LaRocque
- Scouting Director: Randy Flores
- International Operations Director: Moisés Rodríguez (promoted to Asst. GM on Sep. 27, 2017)
- Director of Player Personnel: Matt Slater
- Director, Baseball Administration: John Vuch
- Senior Medical Advisor: Barry Weinberg
- Finance and Administration
- Sr. Vice President and CFO: Brad Wood
- Event Services
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The Basement Tapes [SEP] performer
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Invisible Republic
Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes (1997) is a book by music critic Greil Marcus (born 1945) about the creation and cultural importance of "The Basement Tapes", a series of recordings made by Bob Dylan in 1967 in collaboration with the Hawks, who would subsequently become known as the Band. ()
The updated paperback edition (2011, Picador) is retitled The Old, Weird America, a term coined by Marcus to describe the often eerie country, blues, and folk
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"Pictures of You" by The Cure
- "Quiet" by The Smashing Pumpkins
- "Thieves" by Ministry
B-sides.
- "Build" — found on "The Basement Tapes"
- "Commuter" — found on "The Basement Tapes"
- "Credit to You" — found on "The Basement Tapes"
- "Humidity" — found on "The Basement Tapes"
- "Tom" — acoustic song found on "The Blue Album"
-
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Hampton Bridge [SEP] instance of
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Hampton Bridge
The Hampton Bridge is a bascule bridge that spans the Hampton River near Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, United States. Constructed with steel and concrete, the bridge is officially named for Neil R. Underwood. Its predecessor was constructed of wood by Wallace D. Lovell and was referred to as the Mile-Long Wooden Bridge. For a time in the early 1900s, Hampton Bridge earned the title of longest bridge in the United States.
The completion of the old bridge took almost a year and according to the "
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Jul 2016
- Huntsville, AL - From 27 Jul to 31 Jul 2016
- St. Louis, MO - From 3 Aug to 7 Aug 2016
- Manchester, NH - From 25 Aug to 28 Aug 2016
- Hershey, PA - From 31 Aug to 4 Sep 2016
- Hampton, VA- From 7 Sep to 11 Sep 2016
- Roanoke, VA- From 14 Sep to 18 Sep 2016
- Orlando, FL- From 21 Sep to 25 Sep 2016
- Estero, FL-From 28 Sep
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Hepsidera [SEP] taxon rank
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Hepsidera
Hepsidera is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.
References.
- Natural History Museum Lepidoptera genus database
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- Review, Isis, Sep., 1998, vol. 89, no. 3, p. 557
- Review, Taxon, Nov., 1996, vol. 45, no. 4, p. 726
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 2: Texas Family Secrets" (1997)
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 3: Texas Millennium Book" (1999)
- "Gideon Lincecum's Sword: Civil War Letters from the Texas Homefront" (2001)
- Review,
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Kiss the Tears Away [SEP] performer
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Kiss the Tears Away
Kiss the Tears Away is the fifth album by Silly Wizard released in 1983 on the Highway Records label in the U.K. and on the Shanachie label in the U.S. This album introduces the song "The Queen of Argyle" and "Golden, Golden" written by Andy M. Stewart.
Track listing.
1. "The Queen of Argyll (3:28)"
2. "Golden, Golden (3:55)"
3. "Finlay M. MacRae (3:34)"
4. "
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2013"
- 2010 "Dan & Matt Wilson Minneapolis 2010"
Discography Trip Shakespeare.
- 1992 "Volt" (EP)
- 1991 "Lulu"
- 1990 "Across the Universe"
- 1989 "Are You Shakespearienced?"
Discography The Love Monsters.
- 1983 "Kiss Away The Tears" (7")
Discography Film, TV, and Soundtracks (as a performer).
- 2013 "Absolutely Cuckoo: Minnesota covers the 69 Love Songs" – "The Things We Did
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Herb Scherer [SEP] member of sports team
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a rookie. The following season, he played for the New York Knicks, averaging 3.9 points per game.
Following his NBA career, Scherer started his own construction business. He died on June 28, 2012 in his home in Roswell, Georgia.
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Susan Scherer
Sue Scherer (born August 27, 1956) played for the Canadian National women's ice hockey team from 1989 to 1992. Scherer was a team member on Canada's National Team in two sports, ice hockey and softball.
Playing career.
The Kitchener native was a catcher in softball. She was part of the Canadian national softball team that took fourth in the World Championships in New Zealand in 1986 and fifth at the World Championships in Taiwan in 1982. Scherer also competed with the softball team at
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Lewald Glacier [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Lewald Glacier
Lewald Glacier () is a small glacier west of Cape Vahsel, flowing northward to the coast at the east end of South Georgia. It was named by the Second German Antarctic Expedition, 1911–12, under Wilhelm Filchner, for Theodor Lewald, Ministerialdirektor im Reichsamt des Innern, Germany, who took an active interest in the expedition.
See also.
- List of glaciers in the Antarctic
- Glaciology
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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Cordelia Edvardson [SEP] country of citizenship
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Cordelia Edvardson
Cordelia Maria Edvardson (née Heller; 1 January 1929 – 29 October 2012) was a German-born Swedish journalist, author and Holocaust survivor. She was the Jerusalem correspondent for "Svenska Dagbladet", a Swedish daily newspaper, from 1977 to 2006. Edvardson reported extensively on the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, remaining a columnist for "Svenska Dagbladet" after leaving her post in 2006.
Background.
Edvardson was born in Munich, Germany, in 1929. She was raised Catholic. However, since
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Tennessee Walking Horse, also popular in the southeastern US. In the late 1800s, horse shows became increasingly popular in the southeastern United States, as an alternative to the gambling associated with horse racing. Racking Horses were most commonly seen at small shows, although they were also seen at some larger ones. They did not have their own breed association, however, and were often shown as a type of Tennessee Walking Horse.
In 1971, Racking Horse enthusiasts formed their own group, the Racking Horse Breeders' Association of
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Ludwig von Vogelsang [SEP] place of birth
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Ludwig von Vogelsang
Ludwig Freiherr von Vogelsang (born 12 December 1748 in Brussels; died 28 June 1822 in Fortress Josefov) was an Austrian infantry commander during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.
External links.
- Biography Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (German Wikisource)
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), German actor
- Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang (1818-1890), social reformer
- Ludwig von Vogelsang, Austrian general of the French Revolution and Napoleonic period
- Theo Vogelsang (born 1990), German footballer
- Willem Vogelsang (born 1956), deputy director of the International Institute for Asian Studies at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands
See also.
- "Monika Vogelsang", a 1920 German silent historical drama film
- Ordensburg Vogelsang, a former Nazi elite school in Germany
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Megachile benigna [SEP] taxon rank
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Megachile benigna
Megachile benigna is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae. It was described by Mitchell in 1930.
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Philipp von Cobenzl
Johann Philipp, Graf von Cobenzl (28 May 1741 – 30 August 1810) was a statesman of the Habsburg Monarchy and the Austrian Empire.
Life.
Cobenzl was born in Ljubljana, Carniola, the son of treasurer Count Guidobald von Cobenzl (1716–1797) and his wife Countess Maria Benigna von Montrichier (1720–1793). The Cobenzl family, of Carinthian origin, was elevated to "Freiherren" noble rank in 1588 and raised to Imperial Counts in 1722. His uncle Johann Karl Philipp von Cobenzl was
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Victory [SEP] cast member
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Victory (1919 film)
Victory is a surviving 1919 American drama film directed by Maurice Tourneur and starring Jack Holt, Seena Owen, Lon Chaney, and Wallace Beery. The film is an adaptation of the eponymous novel by Joseph Conrad. The screenplay was written by Jules Furthman.
Plot.
As described in a film magazine, Axel Heyst (Holt), a strange and silent man, forms but one friendship being that of a sailing man without any apparent resources, who rewards this charitable assistance by giving Heyst
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but the cast is very complimentary toward him and his recent victory over David Loiseau.
- Team Mojo picks Pete Sell to fight McCarthy, with the remaining middleweight matchup will be Rivera against Patrick Côté.
- Pete Sell defeated Charles McCarthy via unanimous decision after three rounds.
- The sudden victory round was scored 10–9 by all judges.
Episode 7: Drop to a Knee (Original Air Date Sep 28, 2006)
- Rich Franklin's welcome is worn, as he criticizes the fighters for their languid
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Pierreville [SEP] instance of
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Pierreville, Meurthe-et-Moselle
Pierreville is a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department in north-eastern France.
Geography.
The river Madon flows through the commune.
See also.
- Communes of the Meurthe-et-Moselle department
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Pierreville. The limits of the reserve begin only a short walk away from the town's main street.
History.
On 21 August 1991, an F3 tornado, the ""tornade de Maskinongé"", touched down in Notre-Dame-de-Pierreville (today part of Pierreville), destroying a number of summer homes in the area and injuring 15 people.
On June 13, 2001, the parish municipalities of Notre-Dame-de-Pierreville and Saint-Thomas-de-Pierreville merged
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Grand Central Hotel [SEP] instance of
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Grand Central Hotel
The Grand Central Hotel, later renamed the Broadway Central Hotel, was a hotel at 673 Broadway, New York City, that was famous as the site of the murder of financier James Fisk in 1872 by Edward S. Stokes.
The hotel collapsed on August 3, 1973, killing four residents and injuring at least twelve.
History.
This hotel, which opened in 1870, was designed by Henry Engelbert, and was commissioned by Elias S. Higgins, a local carpet manufacturer. The hotel's
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South and Central America Asia/Pacific Oceania
Tour Grand Chapiteau tour.
Tour Grand Chapiteau tour 1999 schedule.
- Montréal, QC - From 22 Apr 1999 "(show premiere)"
- Québec, QC - From 24 Jun 1999
- Toronto, ON - From 29 Jul 1999 to 5 Sep 1999
- Santa Monica, CA - From 23 Sep 1999 to 21 Nov 1999
- Irvine, CA - From 2 Dec 1999
Tour Grand Chapiteau tour 2000 schedule.
- San Francisco, CA -
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The Panic Hand [SEP] author
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The Panic Hand
The Panic Hand is a collection of horror stories by the American writer Jonathan Carroll, first published in 1996. Carroll has written 8 novels prior to this collection, including The Land of Laughs and A Child Across the Sky. The US edition includes the novella Black Cocktail, originally published as a standalone work.
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The Small Hand
The Small Hand: A Ghost Story, is a novel by English author Susan Hill, first published in 2010 by Profile Books.
Plot introduction.
On returning from a visit to a client, antiquarian book dealer Adam Snow takes a wrong turn and comes across a derelict Edwardian House. Overcome by curiosity he approaches the entrance and feels a small cold hand creeping into his own 'as if a child had taken hold of it'. Over the coming weeks he becomes subject to nightmares and panic
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2013 World Sprint Speed Skating Championships [SEP] country
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2013 World Sprint Speed Skating Championships
The 2013 World Sprint Speed Skating Championships is a long track speed skating event that was held in January 26–27, 2013, in the Utah Olympic Oval, in Salt Lake City, United States.
Rules.
All participating skaters are allowed to skate the two 500 meters and one 1000 meters; 24 skaters may take part on the second 1000 meters. These 24 skaters are determined by the samalog standings after the three skated distances, and comparing these lists as follows:
1.
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Women's 500 metres standings after the fourth World Cup race in Berlin secured a spot for their country. Then the additional 16 spots were awarded based on a time ranking of all times skated in the World Cup and the 2014 World Sprint Speed Skating Championships. A reserve list was also made.
Records.
Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.
500 meters (1 race)
500 meters x 2 (2 races)
At the 2013 World Single Distance Speed Skating
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John William Waterhouse [SEP] spouse
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Esther Kenworthy Waterhouse
Esther Kenworthy Waterhouse (1857–1944), born Esther Maria Kenworthy, was a British artist who exhibited her flower-paintings at the Royal Academy and elsewhere.
She was the daughter of James Lees Kenworthy, an artist and schoolmaster from Ealing, in West London; and Elizabeth, a school-mistress.
She married fellow artist John William Waterhouse at the parish church in Ealing, in 1883, and thereafter used the name Esther Kenworthy Waterhouse. Initially, they lived in a purpose built artistic colony in
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paintings with an occult theme featuring in the set dressing of the TV series, "The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina".
See also.
- List of paintings by John William Waterhouse
Further reading.
- .
External links.
- johnwilliamwaterhouse.net
- John William Waterhouse (The Art and Life of JW Waterhouse);
- John William Waterhouse (Comprehensive Painting Gallery)
- John William Waterhouse Style and Technique
- Waterhouse at Tate Britain
- Ten Dreams Galleries
- John William Waterhouse in
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Ayad Allawi [SEP] occupation
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Ayad Allawi
Ayad Allawi (. ; born May 31, 1944) is an Iraqi politician. He served as Vice President of Iraq from 2014 to 2015, interim Prime Minister of Iraq from 2004 to 2005 and was the President of the Governing Council of Iraq (38th Prime Minister of Iraq) in 2003. He became Vice President again, in October 2016.
A prominent Iraqi political activist who lived in exile for almost 30 years, Allawi, a Shia Muslim, became a member of the Iraq Interim Governing Council
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by the United States in preparation for a transfer of sovereignty on June 30, 2004. Chalabi had been a critic of the transfer, saying that the U.S. retained too much power.
In the lead up to the January 2005 Iraqi election INC joined the United Iraqi Alliance coalition of mainly Shi'ite groups as Chalabi reinvented himself as a sharp critic of the occupation, aligning himself with Muqtada al-Sadr. Chalabi was appointed as Deputy Prime Minister in the transitional government, and INC member Ali Allawi (the cousin of Ayad Allawi
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River Isle [SEP] mouth of the watercourse
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Drayton, Somerset
Drayton is a village and civil parish in Somerset, England, focussed less than a mile from Curry Rivel and five miles southwest of Somerton in the South Somerset district. It adjoins the River Isle, near its confluence with the Parrett, and the former Westport Canal. The parish includes the hamlet of Midelney.
The village has a population of 379 and is home to St Catherine's parish church and the "Drayton Arms" pub.
History.
It is trite in Anglo-Saxon language
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River (confluence with the Kabika River);
- southwesterly of the mouth of the Kabika River (confluence with the Burntbush River);
- southwesterly of the mouth of the Burntbush River (confluence with the Turgeon River);
- north of Northwest Bay of Abitibi Lake.
Toponymy.
The term "Kenning" is a family name of English origin.
See also.
- River Case, a watercourse
- Kabika River, a watercourse
- Burntbush River, a watercourse
- Turgeon
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Quiet [SEP] performer
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Quiet (album)
Quiet is an album by jazz guitarist John Scofield. With its emphasis on acoustic guitar and gentle orchestral arrangements, "Quiet" is something of an oddity in Scofield's discography, which more typically features electric jazz fusion and soul/funk-influenced music.
Personnel.
- John Scofield – acoustic guitar
- Wayne Shorter – tenor saxophone
- Steve Swallow – bass guitar
- Duduka da Fonseca – drums
- Bill Stewart – drums
- Horn section
- Randy Brecker –
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– Sep 1928
"The Cyclone Lover" [Original, Play, Comedy]
Performer: Suzanne Bennett [Katherine] -Dates: Jun 5, 1928 – Jul 1928
"What Do We Know?" [Original, Play]
Performer: Suzanne Bennett [Ernestine Fox] -Dates: Dec 23, 1927 – Jan 1928
"Merry-Go-Round" [Original, Musical, Comedy, Revue]
Performer: Suzanne Bennett -Dates: May 31, 1927 – Sep 24, 1927
"Nic
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San Jacinto Mountains [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Trifolium monanthum
Trifolium monanthum is a species of clover known by the common name mountain carpet clover.
It is native to eastern California and western Nevada in the Sierra Nevada, and in Southern California in the eastern Transverse Ranges, and the San Jacinto Mountains. It occurs at elevations above in coniferous forests, woodlands, and meadows.
Description.
"Trifolium monanthum" is a small perennial herb forming small clumps of hairless or slightly hairy herbage. The leaves are made up of oval leaflets up to 1.2 centimeters in
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is also a "σ"−group, the required automorphism being formula_833. This can be seen by applying the epimorphism formula_54 to the equation formula_855 which yields
Stabilization criteria.
In this section, the results concerning the inheritance of TTTs and TKTs from quotients in the previous section are applied to the simplest case, which is characterized by the following
Assumption. The parent formula_704 of a group formula_1 is the quotient formula_859 of formula_1 by the last non-trivial term formula_861 of the lower central series of formula_1, where formula_863 denotes the
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Timothy Raison [SEP] occupation
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Timothy Raison
Sir Timothy Hugh Francis Raison (3 November 1929 – 3 November 2011) was a British Conservative politician.
Early life and education.
The son of publisher and editor Maxwell Raison, general manager of Picture Post, and his wife Celia, Raison was educated, through being a scholarship boy, at two independent schools: at The Dragon School in Oxford, where he became Head of School. From there he got a scholarship to Eton College near Windsor, Berkshire, then to Christ Church at the University
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Scientist".
He died at Theberton, Suffolk on 26 July 1988, leaving five sons, one of whom was Timothy Raison. His granddaughter is the actress Miranda Raison.
External links.
- Max Raison at ESPNcricinfo
- Max Raison at CricketArchive
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Primeval Whirl [SEP] instance of
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Primeval Whirl
Primeval Whirl is a steel wild mouse roller coaster at Disney's Animal Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort. The ride is a spinning roller coaster purchased from Reverchon Industries. The ride is part of Chester and Hester's Dino-Rama, which is itself part of DinoLand U.S.A. It is a roller coaster in the "Mild But Wild Thrills" category. It has cars that spin in circles while traveling on tracks, permitting the ride experience to vary greatly each time it is ridden. The ride features 13
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ride is made of steel rather than wood, and the seats face in one direction instead of toward each other. The layout of the ride boasts many hairpin turns and small hops. The design, noted for its portability and small footprint, became popular at smaller amusement parks and fairs. Well known theme park installations of the ride is Primeval Whirl at Disney's Animal Kingdom and Goofy's Sky School at Disney California Adventure.
The Spinning Wild Mouse was first manufactured by Reverchon Industries of France. In 2003 the company merged
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Nyereria [SEP] taxon rank
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Nyereria
Nyereria is a genus of braconid wasps.
Species.
- "Nyereria ganges"
- "Nyereria mayurus"
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- Review, Isis, Sep., 1998, vol. 89, no. 3, p. 557
- Review, Taxon, Nov., 1996, vol. 45, no. 4, p. 726
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 2: Texas Family Secrets" (1997)
- "Telling Our Stories, Vol. 3: Texas Millennium Book" (1999)
- "Gideon Lincecum's Sword: Civil War Letters from the Texas Homefront" (2001)
- Review,
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Docking the Boat [SEP] original language of film or TV show
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Docking the Boat
Docking the Boat (, or sometimes: "To Go Ashore") is a Swedish dark comedy film from 1965 directed by Tage Danielsson. The film stars Gösta Ekman, Monica Zetterlund, Hans Alfredson, Lars Ekborg and Birgitta Andersson. Monica Zetterlund also performed the theme song.
Plot.
A group of friends are to celebrate the summer on a small island in the Stockholm Archipelago. The plan is to eat crayfish and drink snaps, a quintessentially Swedish tradition. Some are already in the house
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Charles Fredericks
Charles Fredericks (5 Sep 1918 in Columbus, Mississippi – 14 May 1970 in Sherman Oaks, California) was an American actor of stage, television, and film. He was particularly known for his highly prolific career in B-Western movies and television Westerns during the 1950s and 1960s. He was also a talented Baryton-Martin and starred as Gaylord Ravenal in the 1946 Broadway revival of "Show Boat" and as Captain Nicholas Gregorovitch in the original 1947 production of "Music in My Heart". In
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Max Brown [SEP] occupation
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Dimitri Levendis
Dimitri Levendis is a fictional character from the BBC espionage television series, "Spooks", portrayed by actor, Max Brown.
Role in Spooks.
Role in Spooks Character arc.
Dimitri was born in North London on March 17, 1974 to Greek immigrant parents, and formerly served as a soldier in the Royal Marines and latterly in the SBS, but left in unknown circumstances. He consequently joined MI5 as their Piracy and Terrorism Case Officer. His first mission saw him face off Somali terrorists, who
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8 Nov 41 – 11 Nov 42, Algeria-Morocco Occupation, Operation Torch, the Allied Invasion of French North Africa.
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, 9 Jul 43 – 15 Jul 43, Sicily Occupation, Operation Husky, the Allied Invasion of Sicily.
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, 9 Sep 43 – 21 Sep 43, Salerno Landings, Operation Avalanche, the Allied Invasion of Italy.
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, 6 Jun 44 – 25 Jun
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Wit [SEP] director
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Wit (film)
Wit is a 2001 American television movie directed by Mike Nichols. The teleplay by Nichols and Emma Thompson is based on the 1999 Pulitzer Prize winning play of the same title by Margaret Edson.
The film was shown at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 9, 2001 before being broadcast by HBO on March 24. It was shown at the Edinburgh Film Festival and the Warsaw Film Festival later in the year.
Plot.
Vivian Bearing (Emma Thompson) is a professor of English literature
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, bike storage, a laundry room, a reading room, and a common room.
References.
- "U of T residence a landmark for 21st century." "Toronto Star." Nov 20, 1999. pg. 1
- "A transformation in concrete and wit." Christopher Hume. "Toronto Star." Sep 19, 2004. pg. B.04
External links.
- Residence Official site
- Site for residents
- Official University of Toronto Graduate House article by Morphosis
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Kathleen Ekey [SEP] country of citizenship
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Kathleen Ekey
Kathleen Ekey (born November 8, 1986) is an American female professional golfer currently playing on the LPGA Tour.
Early life.
Ekey was born in Cleveland, Ohio on November 8, 1986 to Sam and Laura Ekey.
College.
Ekey played college golf for the first two years of college at Furman University, and transferred to the University of Alabama for the last two years of college. She graduated with her bachelor's degree in Communications Studies.
Professional.
Ekey turned professional
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bold are majors.
Source: Futures Tour official website.
Awards.
- Player of the Year, player who leads the money list at the end of the season
- Kathleen Ekey
- Gaëlle Truet Rookie of the Year Award, first year player with the highest finish on the official money list
- Sydnee Michaels
- Heather Wilbur Spirit Award, a Futures Tour player who "best exemplifies dedication, courage, perseverance, love of the game and spirit toward achieving goals as a professional golfer."
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Tarzan and the Huntress [SEP] genre
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Tarzan and the Huntress
Tarzan and the Huntress is a 1947 adventure film starring Johnny Weissmuller in his eleventh outing as Tarzan. Brenda Joyce makes the third of five appearances as Jane and Johnny Sheffield marks his eighth and final appearance as Boy. Patricia Morison and Barton MacLane co-star. The film was produced by Sol Lesser and Kurt Neumann, written by Jerry Gruskin and Rowland Leigh (based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs) and directed by Kurt Neumann. It was released on April 5, 1947.
Plot
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Prince Suli is able to make his way through the jungle, and is found by Tarzan. Tarzan, Boy and a herd of elephants defeat both the usurping nephew and the huntress, but the latter escapes on board a plane.
Selected cast.
- Johnny Weissmuller as Tarzan
- Brenda Joyce as Jane
- Johnny Sheffield as Boy
- Patricia Morison as Tanya Rawlins, unscrupulous big game huntress
- Barton MacLane as Paul Weir, villainous trail boss
- John Warburton as Carl Marley, backer of Rawlins
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MTV Films [SEP] country
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The Fighting Temptations
The Fighting Temptations is a 2003 American musical comedy-drama film directed by Jonathan Lynn, written by Elizabeth Hunter and Saladin K. Patterson, and distributed by Paramount Pictures and MTV Films. The main plot revolves around Darrin Hill (Cuba Gooding Jr.) who travels to his hometown of Monte Carlo, Georgia as he attempts to revive a church choir in order to enter a gospel competition with the help of a beautiful lounge singer, Lilly (Beyoncé), with whom he falls in love. Through the choir
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'09 and Summer '10 respectively.
Simmons-Shelley Entertainment in partnership with Rain Forest Films, The Coca-Cola Company and MTV debuted their docu-series for MTV2 "Sprite Step-Off" in January 2010. Hosted by Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, the series follows six step teams from fraternities and sororities across the country as they compete in the Sprite Step Off.
Tracey serves as the Head of Development for Jarrett Creative. She served as Executive Producer and Showrunner for Lifetime's "" Season 1
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All-Ireland Senior Football Championship 1993 [SEP] sports season of league or competition
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Eamonn Coleman
Eamonn Coleman (; 1947 or 1948 – 11 June 2007) was an Irish Gaelic footballer and later manager.
He had two separate stints as manager the Derry senior football team, and his chief success was guiding the county to the victory in the 1993 All-Ireland Championship – Derry's first ever All-Ireland Senior Football Championship title. He also had spells as manager of Armagh, Cavan, Longford and various club sides.
Before moving into management he has an accomplished playing career with Derry and his
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Winnipeg Thunder
The Winnipeg Thunder was a professional basketball franchise based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, from 1992 to 1994. The Thunder played its inaugural season in the World Basketball League, which folded before the schedule ended. The club then joined the nascent National Basketball League, where it played for the 1993 and 1994 seasons.
The Thunder enjoyed considerable public and corporate support at the outset, which later dwindled due in part to league instability and increased competition in the local minor-league sports market, following the establishment of the
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Alma Township, Harlan County, Nebraska [SEP] country
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Alma Township, Harlan County, Nebraska
Alma Township is one of sixteen townships in Harlan County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 213 at the 2000 census. A 2006 estimate placed the township's population at 195.
See also.
- County government in Nebraska
External links.
- City-Data.com
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originally served by the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office, which became increasingly unable to provide adequate enforcement to the growing city. With burgeoning crime rates, citizens enacted an ordinance creating the Milwaukee Police Department.
Milwaukee's first chief of police was William Beck, a former NYPD detective, and its first policemen were Fred Keppler, John Hardy, George Fische, James Rice, L.G. Ryan and David Coughlin. As the department expanded, patrolmen were supplemented by "roundsmen", who would lead the patrolmen out to their beats at
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Gerald Fink [SEP] occupation
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Gerald Fink
Gerald Ralph Fink (born July 1, 1940) is an American biologist, who was Director of the Whitehead Institute at MIT from 1990–2001. He graduated from Amherst College in 1962 and received a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1965, having elucidated the histidine pathway in the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. After postdoctoral study at the National Institutes of Health with Bruce Ames on the regulation of the histidine operon of Salmonella, in 1967 he joined Cornell University where he became a Professor of Genetics and pursued the study of the
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in Enzymology" volume 351 Academic Press.
- Christine Guthrie and Gerald R. Fink, editors. 2002 "Guide to Yeast Genetics and Molecular Cell Biology" Part B "Methods in Enzymology" volume 351 Academic Press.
- Christine Guthrie and Gerald R. Fink, editors. 2002 "Guide to Yeast Genetics and Molecular Cel Biology" Part C "Methods in Enzymology" volume 351 Academic Press.
- Jonathan Weisman, Christine Guthrie, and Gerald Fink editors, 2010. Guide to Yeast Genetics: Functional Genomics, Proteomics
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2013 Rugby League World Cup [SEP] sport
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Hikule'o Malu
Hikule'o Malu (Eko Malu) is a New Zealand rugby league player who represented the Cook Islands national rugby league team in the 2013 World Cup.
Playing career.
A Mangere East Hawks junior, Malu was educated at Aorere College.
He was signed by the New Zealand Warriors and made his National Youth Competition debut in 2011. He played in the 2011 and 2013 grand finals.
He was named in the Cook Islands squad for the 2013 World Cup.
In 2014 he played for the
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of Pakistan celebrated Defense day of their country on 06 Sep.
Economy.
- 2014–15 Pakistan federal budget
- 2015–16 Pakistan federal budget
Sport.
Sport Cricket.
International
- Pakistani cricket team in New Zealand in 2014–15
- Zimbabwean cricket team in Pakistan in 2015
Domestic
- 2015 Haier Super 8 T20 Cup
- 2014–15 Haier T20 Cup
Sport Football.
- 2014–15 Pakistan Premier League
Deaths.
- February 23 – Justice Rana Bhagwandas
- May 12 – Saulat Mirza, murderer (b.
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Burn Hall School [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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Jubilee in 2006.
History.
Fr. Thijssen and Fr. Jong came to Srinagar in 1942 and rented a home from Mr Mirza at hotel road (now Moulana Azad Road) Srinagar. The building which housed the first Burn Hall School is at present the Teachers’ Training College. The Srinagar branch closed down temporarily for some time. It was restarted on 17 April 1956 with its first principal, Father J. Boerkamp.
Present form.
Today, Burn Hall School is a Christian missionary institution for boys and
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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Miguel Ituarte [SEP] educated at
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Miguel Ituarte
Miguel Ituarte (born 1968, Getxo) is a Spanish pianist.
Ituarte was trained at the Madrid Conservatory and Amsterdam's Sweelinck Conservatorium. In 1995, he won the XXXVII Premio de Jaén and the IV Fundación Guerrero Competition, and was a finalist at Santander's XIII Paloma O'Shea Competition. He has performed internationally.
References.
Fundación Juan March
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José Ituarte
José Ituarte may refer to:
- Joseba Ituarte (born 1970), Spanish professional footballer
- José Moscardó Ituarte (1878 – 1956), Spanish military Governor of Toledo Province during the Spanish Civil War
- José Luis Ituarte, Spanish racing driver
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Leptodactylus [SEP] parent taxon
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Leptodactylus
Leptodactylus is a genus of leptodactylid frogs. It includes the species commonly called ditch frogs or white-lipped frogs. It is very similar to "Physalaemus", a close relative, and indeed the recently described "Leptodactylus lauramiriamae" is in some aspects intermediate between them.
The name means ‘slender finger’, from "leptos" (‘thin, delicate’) and the Greek "" (, ‘finger, toe’).
Species.
There are about 75 species in this genus
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Leptodactylinae
The Leptodactylinae are a subfamily of leptodactylid frogs distributed between southern North America (Texas, USA, and Sonora, Mexico) and South America to Brazil. Their sister taxon is the clade comprising the Leiuperinae and Paratelmatobiinae.
Genera.
The four genera in the subfamily are:
- "Adenomera"
- "Hydrolaetare"
- "Leptodactylus"
- "Lithodytes"
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Montezuma's Ferrari [SEP] narrative location
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Montezuma's Ferrari
Montezuma's Ferrari is the second novel in Burt "BS" Levy's series about a 19-year-old New Jersey gas station mechanic growing up and coming of age while being sucked into the glamorous, dangerous world of open-road sports car racing during the 1950s. The story begins just a week after "The Last Open Road" ends. In the book, Buddy Palumbo, the main character, repairs cars at the Sinclair gas station he works at in Passaic, New Jersey, and races all
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.
Sequels.
B. S. Levy has written four sequels to "The Last Open Road": "Montezuma's Ferrari, The Fabulous Trashwagon, Toly's Ghost, and The 200 MPH Steamroller." Each story is written as fiction but the racing action is historically based. Levy weaved his fictional characters together with his knowledge and research into the worldwide racing scene of the 1950s and 60's to produce the novels.
External links.
- Official Website
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Tenzing Rigdol [SEP] place of birth
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Tenzing Rigdol
Tenzing Rigdol (born 16 January 1982 in Kathmandu, Nepal) is a contemporary Tibetan artist and activist.
Biography.
Tenzing Rigdol was born 16 January 1982 in Kathmandu, Nepal. He is best known for his installation in Dharamshala which consists of 20,000 kg of Tibetan soil from Shigatse. He is chiefly known for his contemporary pieces although he is also trained in the ancient art of thangka. In 2007, his piece "The Metamorphosis of Life" was sold for £10,000 (about USD 15,000
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Ink", Paljor Publications,
- 2011 : "Anatomy of Nights", Tibet Writes
- 2011 : "Butterfly’s Wings", Tibet Writes
External links.
- Our Land, Our People, Video : conversation of Sharon Hom (HRIC) with Tenzing Rigdol, June 2011
- Children on Soil, Art works of Tenzing Rigdol on Rossi & Rossi website
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systemic therapy [SEP] part of
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Systemic therapy (psychotherapy)
In psychotherapy, systemic therapy seeks to address people not only on the individual level, as had been the focus of earlier forms of therapy, but also as people in relationships, dealing with the interactions of groups and their interactional patterns and dynamics.
History.
Systemic therapy has its roots in family therapy, or more precisely family systems therapy as it later came to be known. In particular, systemic therapy traces its roots to the Milan school of Mara Selvini Palazzoli, but also derives
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"Mixing methods Developing systemic intervention". Hull University, UK. Centre for Systems Studies
- 2000. "Systemic Intervention: Philosophy, Methodology, and Practice". Springer, 1 sep. 2000.
- 2000. "Dealing with Human Relations in Chinese System Practice". With Jifa Gu and David Campbell.
- 2001. "Operational Research and Environmental Management: A New Agenda". Operational Research Society.
- 2003. "Systems Thinking. Volumes I-IV". Edited by Gerald Midgley
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Nafanga [SEP] instance of
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Nafanga
Nafanga is a rural commune in the Cercle of Koutiala in the Sikasso Region of southern Mali. The commune covers an area of 274 square kilometers and includes 6 villages.
- Dougouniona
- Kani
- Karangasso
- Nintabougoro
- Tianhirisso
- Zéguésso
In the 2009 census it had a population of 9,273. The village of Karangasso, the administrative centre ("chef-lieu") of the commune, is 26 km southeast of Koutiala.
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Karangasso
Karangasso is a village and seat ("chef-lieu") of the commune of Nafanga in the Cercle of Koutiala in the Sikasso Region of southern Mali.
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St Clears [SEP] located in the administrative territorial entity
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St Clears railway station
St Clears railway station served the small town of St Clears, Carmarthenshire, Wales between 1854 and 1964. It was on the West Wales Line.
History.
The station opened on 2 January 1854. It was on the section of the South Wales Railway which opened that day between the temporary station near Carmarthen and , and was situated between and .
The station closed on 15 June 1964. An attempt to reopen the station in 1973 was made by five local authorities and organisations, together
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Reichskommissariat
Reichskommissariat () is the German designation for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a "Reichskommissar" (). Although many different such offices existed primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods in a number of different fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense
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Piergiorgio Welby [SEP] country of citizenship
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Piergiorgio Welby
Piergiorgio Welby (Rome, 26 December 1945 - 20 December 2006) was an Italian poet, painter and activist whose three-month-long battle to establish his right to die led to a debate about euthanasia in his country.
Welby was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy as a teenager in the early 1960s. The disease progressed, and in 1997 he became unable to breathe on his own. He became politically active in the right-to-die movement, and in 2006 he publicly declared his wish to
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Petra Cetkovská
Petra Cetkovská (; born 8 February 1985 in Prostějov, Czechoslovakia) is a tennis player from the Czech Republic. Having turned professional in 2000, she reached her career-high singles ranking of world No. 25 on 18 June 2012. Over her career, Cetkovská defeated top players Marion Bartoli, Elena Dementieva, Ana Ivanovic, Angelique Kerber, Li Na, Agnieszka Radwańska, Caroline Wozniacki, and Vera Zvonareva.
Personal life.
Cetkovská has been playing tennis since she was five. Her father Petr works
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Champéon [SEP] country
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Champéon
Champéon is a commune in the Mayenne department in north-western France.
See also.
- Communes of Mayenne
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video for a summary of the event http://vimeo.com/6994555
2009 Competition Event 30: Acores Pro (6*).
"Aug 25 - Aug 30"
2009 Competition Event 31: Japan Pro Open (3*).
"Sep 01 - Sep 06"
2009 Competition "Event 32: TBA - Zarautz, Basque Country (5*)".
"Sep 01 - Sep 06"
2009 Competition Event 33: Gatorade Surf Classic (3*).
"Sep 04 - Sep 06"
2009 Competition Event 34:
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Brodie Ainslie [SEP] member of sports team
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Brodie Ainslie
Brodie Ainslie (10 August 1891 – 17 December 1944) was an Australian rules footballer who played for St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Ainslie played one match for St Kilda in 1911 and scored no goals.
He served in both the Australian Imperial Force (7th Battalion) during World War I and the Second Australian Imperial Force during World War II.
He died suddenly in 1944, six months after being discharged.
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gave up the names of Smith and Ainslie (initially saying nothing of Brodie's involvement). Smith and Ainslie were arrested and the next day Brodie attempted to visit them in prison but was refused. Realising that he had to leave Edinburgh, Brodie escaped to London and then to the Netherlands intending to flee to the United States but was arrested in Amsterdam and shipped back to Edinburgh for trial.
The trial of Brodie and Smith started on 27 August 1788. At first there was no hard evidence against Brodie, although the
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The World Swappers [SEP] genre
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The World Swappers
The World Swappers is a science fiction novel by British writer John Brunner. It was first published in the United States in 1959, as one half of Ace Double D-391. The other half was "Siege of the Unseen" by A. E. van Vogt. Reprinted by Ace 1967, 1976.
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the World", DAW 112 (1974)
- "The World Swappers", Ace D-391 (1959)
- "The Brink", Gollancz (1959)
- "Slavers of Space", Ace D-421 (1960); revised as "Into the Slave Nebula", Lancer (1968)
- "The Skynappers", Ace D-457 (1960)
- "The Atlantic Abomination", Ace D-465 (1960)
- "Sanctuary in the Sky", Ace D-471 (1960)
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Winterthur Museum and Country Estate [SEP] country
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Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library
Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library is an American estate and museum in Winterthur, Delaware. , it houses one of the most important collections of Americana in the United States of America. It was the former home of Henry Francis du Pont (1880–1969), a renowned antiques collector and horticulturist. Until recently, it was known as the Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum.
History.
In the early 20th century, H. F. du Pont and his father, Henry Algernon du Pont
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guns were removed from the experimental XP-61E, the last fighter variant of the P-61 Black Widow. With less than six months flying time, the first XP-61E was taken back to the Northrop modification shop where it was converted into an unarmed photographic reconnaissance aircraft. All the guns were removed, and a new nose was fitted, capable of holding an assortment of aerial cameras. The aircraft, redesignated XF-15, flew for the first time on 3 July 1945, with Northrop test pilot L. A. "Slim" Parrett at the controls.
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Otto Modersohn [SEP] genre
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Otto Modersohn
Friedrich Wilhelm Otto Modersohn (22 February 1865, Soest – 10 March 1943, Rotenburg) was a German landscape painter. He was a co-founder of the Art Colony at Worpswede.
Life.
In 1884, he began his studies at the Art Academy of Düsseldorf. Four years later, he moved to the Academy of Fine Arts, Karlsruhe, where he studied under . In July 1889, he made his first visit to Worpswede with Fritz Mackensen. In August, Hans am Ende followed.
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VDG, Weimar 2000, , Pages 117-130
- Marina Bohlmann-Modersohn: "Otto Modersohn – Leben und Werk", Otto Modersohn Museum, Fischerhude 2005,
- Christian Modersohn: "Das Erbe meines Vaters – Zwei Leben für die Kunst." Otto Modersohn Museum, Fischerhude 2005.
Documentary film.
- "So weit und groß. Die Natur des Otto Modersohn", Directed by Carlo Modersohn, written by Marina Bohlmann-Modersohn, narrated by Hanns Zischler, produced by the Otto Modersohn Museum
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Kigali International Airport [SEP] place served by transport hub
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Bourbon Coffee
Bourbon Coffee is a coffeehouse chain based in Kigali, Rwanda. It has currently four coffeehouses in Kigali, the first one at Union Trade Centre (UTC) in Kiyovu, the second one at the MTN centre in Nyarutarama, the third in Kigali City Tower, and the fourth one at Kigali International Airport.
It is also expanding to the United States market, opening locations simultaneously in Boston and in Washington, DC at 2101 L St NW.
See also.
- List of coffeehouse chains
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in Africa. However, the actual great circle midpoint between these two cities lies in central Congo. The clock tower is currently adorned with the logo of the Coca-Cola beverage Company.
Transport.
Transport Airport.
Arusha is served by two airports the Kilimanjaro International Airport for international air travellers, some east, approximately halfway to Moshi. The airport provides international and domestic flights. The Arusha Airport is a regional air hub in the west of the city and serves more than 87,000 passengers yearly.
Transport Road links.
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Naunihal [SEP] cast member
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Naunihal
Naunihal is a 1967 Indian Hindi-language drama film directed by Raj Marbros starring Sanjeev Kumar, Balraj Sahni and Indrani Mukherjee in lead roles. The film's music was composed by Madan Mohan, with lyrics by Kaifi Azmi, including the song "Meri Aawaz Suno Pyar ka Raaz Suno" (Hear my voice, hear the secret of love) sung by Mohammad Rafi. The song is picturized over the funeral procession of Prime Minister of India, Jawahar Lal Nehru.
Plot.
The film is about orphan
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Naunihal Singh
Naunihal Singh may refer to:
- Naunihal Singh, member of the Indian Parliament
- Naunihal Singh, political scientist
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Smile [SEP] country of origin
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Smile (R5 song)
"Smile" is a song by American pop rock band R5. It had its radio premiere on November 14, 2014 as the lead single from their second studio album, "Sometime Last Night".
Writing and composition.
The song was written by Leah Haywood, Daniel James, Brian Lee and Matt Thiessen and produced by Dreamlab and Randall Bobbitt. The band's frontman, Ross Lynch, told Teen Magazine that the song was about "doing ridiculous things in order to make someone
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) - 1930
3. "Congo Jazz" (Harman and Ising/Sep/"") - 1930
4. "The Booze Hangs High" (Harman and Ising/Nov/"") - 1930
5. "Lady, Play Your Mandolin!" (Ising/"") - 1931
6. "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile!" (Ising/Sep 5/"") - 1931
7. "One More Time" (Ising/Oct 3/"") - 1931
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North Shore Historic District [SEP] country
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North Shore Historic District (Miami Beach, Florida)
The North Shore Historic District is a historic district in North Beach, Miami Beach, Florida, United States. The district is roughly bounded by 87th Street, Collins Avenue, 73rd Street, and Hawthorne Avenue. The architecture in the district is primarily of the Miami Modernism style, unique to greater Miami. Other architectural styles are reflected in the district, including Mediterranean Revival, Art Deco, and Moderne.
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, near Ostend.
- Zumaia – Zumaia is a small town in the north of Spain in the Basque Country.
History of fishing Historic fishing culture Historic fishing communities.
- Community supported fishery – A community supported fishery is a shore-side community of people collaborating with the local fishing community.
- Atlit Yam – Atlit Yam is an ancient submerged Neolithic village off the coast of Atlit, Israel.
- Halong Bay Ha Long Bay
- Lofoten – Lofoten is an archipelago and a traditional district in the county
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Jason Epstein [SEP] educated at
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Jason Epstein
Jason Wolkow Epstein (born August 25, 1928) is an American editor and publisher.
Life and career.
Born to a Jewish family on August 25, 1928 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. An only child, he attended public schools in Milton, Massachusetts. He graduated from Columbia College of Columbia University in 1949 and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received a Master of Arts degree from Columbia the following year and joined Doubleday and Company as an editorial trainee.
At Doubleday, he saw
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very wide selection, careful attention to display, and a reliance on sophisticated information systems in order to build a chain that would appeal to affluent, educated readers." Jason Epstein, author of "Book Business: Publishing Past, Present, and Future", described the chain as being modeled on the supermarket concept. Miller stated that the store format was "consciously" modeled after the format of the Toys "R" Us stores. Laura Elder of the "Houston Business Journal" wrote that the chain "pioneered the
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Finlay Bay Water Aerodrome [SEP] country
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Finlay Bay Water Aerodrome
Finlay Bay Water Aerodrome, , was located on Finlay Bay, British Columbia, Canada.
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. The headland is also known today as Brønlunds Grave ().
The last entry of his diary reads as follows:
Legacy.
The 172 page diary is archived at the Royal Danish Library. A memorial stone erected in Copenhagen's harbor quotes the diary's last lines.
Jørgen Brønlund Fjord in Peary Land is named in his honor. The one hundred year anniversary of his birth was commemorated by the issue of a Greenlandic postal stamp.
Also by a medallion of G (Eugene L. Daub),
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Wrington [SEP] instance of
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Wrington
Wrington is a village and a civil and ecclesiastical parish in North Somerset, England. Both parishes include the nearby village of Redhill. Wrington lies in the valley of the Congresbury Yeo river, about east of Weston-super-Mare and south-east of Yatton. It has a population of 2,633 according to the 2011 Census.
History.
The village dates back to Roman times and there is strong evidence of Saxon occupation as well.
Wrington was historically part of the hundred of Brent-cum-
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Wrington.
Wrington Cottage Hospital opened in 1864 and admitted 24 patients in its first year of operation. The first surgeon was Horace Swete, who wrote the "Habdy Book of Cottage Hospitals". It was referred to by Florence Nightingale in 1869.
Wrington had its own railway station between 1901 and 1963, on the Wrington Vale Light Railway, which ran from Congresbury to Blagdon.
Governance.
As a parish council, Wrington Council has responsibility for setting an annual precept (local rate) to cover operating costs
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Haykel Achouri [SEP] place of birth
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Haykel Achouri
Haykel Al-Achouri (also Haykel Achouri, ; born August 29, 1984 in Tunis) is an amateur Tunisian Greco-Roman wrestler, who played for the men's light heavyweight category. He is a multiple-time African wrestling champion, and a bronze medalist for his division at the 2011 Pan Arab Games in Doha, Qatar.
Achouri represented Tunisia at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed for the men's 84 kg class. He received a bye for the preliminary round of
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the Followers" ("Tabi‘ al-Tabi‘in").
Tenets.
According to Bernard Haykel, "temporal proximity to the Prophet Muhammad is associated with the truest form of Islam" among many Sunni Muslims.
The Salafi "da'wa" is a methodology, but it is not a "madh'hab" in "fiqh" (jurisprudence) as is commonly misunderstood. Salafis may be influenced by the Maliki, Shafi'i, Hanbali or the Hanafi schools of Sunni fiqh.
Salafis place great emphasis on practicing actions
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