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892669 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manouchehr%20Arianpour | Manouchehr Arianpour | Manouchehr Arianpour Kashani (, 29 August 1929 - 22 December 2021) was an Iranian translator and lexicographer. He is the son of Abbas Arianpour Kashani.
Life
Manouchehr Arianpour was born on September 29, 1929, in Kashan. He founded the High School of Translation with the help of his father in 1969. After graduating, he taught at American universities. In 1969, he and his father founded the Higher School of Translation in Iran, where students studied for the first time. This high school trained students in various fields of translation. He received his doctorate from the University of Colorado in 1958 with a dissertation on Walter Raleigh.
Manouchehr Arianpour Kashani in the early years of the 1970s with the help of students and some professors of the same high school began to compile the culture of Arianpour, which results in a variety of Persian to English and English to Persian dictionaries. In addition to the dictionary, he has authored and translated other works. One of these works is called "Leading English Grammar and Writing Ritual".
Death
Manouchehr Arianpour died on December 22, 2021, at the age of 92 in the United States.
Works
Some of his works are:
The Aryanpur Progressive English–Persian Dictionary
Pishro Arianpour High School Culture
Arianpour Leading Vocabulary Guide
Arianpour English grammar and writing ritual
Persian words in English (Siri in the phonology of etymology).
Farhang Bozorg One-volume Persian to Persian Pishro Arianpour.
References
1929 births
2021 deaths
Translators
Iranian people |
892673 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanger%20Lane%20tube%20station | Hanger Lane tube station | Hanger Lane is a London Underground station. It is in Hanger Hill, Ealing, on the border between West and Northwest London. It is on the West Ruislip branch of the Central line, between Perivale and North Acton stations, and is in Travelcard Zone 3.
It is quite close to Park Royal station on the Piccadilly line and it is possible to walk between the two stations. The two lines cross east of Hanger Lane station. The station is in the middle of Hanger Lane gyratory.
Connections
London Buses routes 95, 112, 226, 483 and 487 serve the station.
References
Central line stations
Coordinates on Wikidata
Rail transport stations in London fare zone 3 |
892676 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clackamas%2C%20Oregon | Clackamas, Oregon | Clackamas is an unincorporated community and former census-designated place (CDP) in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States. It is a suburb of Portland. The population was 7,000 in 2010.
References
Unincorporated communities in Oregon |
892677 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harley%20Quinn%20Smith | Harley Quinn Smith | Harley Quinn Smith (born June 26, 1999) is an American actress and musician. She appeared in the movies Tusk and Yoga Hosers, both written and directed by her father, Kevin Smith. She also had a small role in Quentin Tarantino Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, playing a member of the Manson Family.
She is also the bass player and one of the singers in the bubblegum punk band The Tenth.
She was named after the female Batman character Harley Quinn.
Smith is bisexual.
References
1999 births
Living people
American movie actors
American television actors
American child actors
Bisexual people
LGBT actors
LGBT musicians
LGBT singers
Musicians from New Jersey
Singers from New Jersey
Actors from New Jersey
American guitarists
LGBT people from New Jersey
Podcasters
Kevin Smith |
892678 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer%20Schwalbach%20Smith | Jennifer Schwalbach Smith | Jennifer Schwalbach Smith (born April 7, 1971), sometimes known as Jennifer Schwalbach, is an American actress, podcaster and retired reporter for USA Today.
In 1999, Schwalbach married filmmaker Kevin Smith. They have one daughter, Harley Quinn.
Movies
References
1971 births
Living people
American movie actors
American television actors
American voice actors
Movie producers from New Jersey
Journalists from New Jersey
Models from New Jersey
Podcasters
Actors from Newark, New Jersey
Writers from Newark, New Jersey
Kevin Smith |
892680 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aparna%20Brielle | Aparna Brielle | Aparna Brielle (born Aparna Parthasarathy; February 5, 1994) is an American actress. She is known for playing Sarika Sarkar on the NBC television series A.P. Bio.
References
Other websites
Living people
1994 births
American movie actors
American child actors
American television actors
American voice actors
Actors from Portland, Oregon |
892692 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posterior%20cruciate%20ligament | Posterior cruciate ligament | The posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) is a ligament in each knee of humans and many other animals. It works as a counterpart to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). It connects the posterior intercondylar area of the tibia to the medial condyle of the femur. This allows the PCL to resist forces pushing the tibia posteriorly relative to the femur.
The PCL gets its name by attaching to the posterior portion of the tibia.
The PCL, ACL, MCL, and LCL are the four main ligaments of the knee in primates.
References
Skeletal system |
892694 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meniscus%20%28anatomy%29 | Meniscus (anatomy) | A meniscus is a crescent-shaped fibrocartilaginous anatomical structure that only partly divides a joint cavity. This contrasts an articular disc. In humans they are present in the knee, wrist, acromioclavicular, sternoclavicular, and temporomandibular joints. In other animals they may be present in other joints.
Generally, the term "meniscus" is used to refer to the cartilage of the knee, either to the lateral or medial meniscus. Both are cartilaginous tissues that provide structural integrity to the knee when it undergoes tension and torsion. The menisci are also known as "semi-lunar" cartilages, referring to their half-moon, crescent shape.
The term "meniscus" is from the Ancient Greek word (), meaning "crescent".
References
Skeletal system |
892698 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Franchot | Peter Franchot | Peter Van Rensselaer Franchot (born November 25, 1947) is an American politician. He has been the 33rd Comptroller of Maryland since 2007. He is a member of the Democratic Party. He was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from 1987 until 2007.
In January 2020, Franchot announced his plans to run for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Maryland in the 2022 election.
References
1947 births
Living people
State legislators of the United States
Politicians from New Haven, Connecticut
Politicians from Maryland
US Democratic Party politicians
People from Takoma Park, Maryland |
892703 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine%20Barrens%20tree%20frog | Pine Barrens tree frog | The Pine Barrens tree frog, Anderson's hyla, Anderson's tree toad, or Anderson's tree frog (Dryophytes andersonii) is a frog that lives in the North America. It lives in two places: New Jersey and North Carolina. It is named after the Pine Barrens in southern New Jersey.
The adult frog is about 3.8 cm long from nose to rear end. The frog's skin is green with a purple stripe. There is orange color on the frog's legs. There is some webbing on the frog's hind feet but none on the front feet.
References
Frogs
Animals of North America |
892705 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumming | Cumming | Cumming may refer to:
Places in the United States
Cumming, Georgia
Cumming, Iowa
Cumming Township, Michigan
Other uses
Cumming (surname)
Cumming baronets, a title in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia, Canada
Cumming Corporation, an American project management firm
Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Cumming metro station, Santiago, Chile
to cum
Clan Cumming, a Scottish clan from the central Highlands
Related pages
Cuming (disambiguation)
Cummings (disambiguation)
Cummins (disambiguation) |
892707 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth%20Rutte%20cabinet | Fourth Rutte cabinet | The Fourth Rutte cabinet, also called Rutte IV cabinet or Rutte IV, is the current government of the Netherlands.
It was sworn in on January 10, 2022. It is named after Prime Minister Mark Rutte (VVD).
It is a coalition of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD), Democrats 66 (D66), the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), and the ChristianUnion (CU), the same parties of the previous government.
VVD is a conservative and D66 a social liberal party. CDA is a Christian democratic and CU an orthodox Christian democratic party.
The Fourth Rutte cabinet has 77 seats in the House of Representatives and 32 seats in the Senate.
Deputy Prime Ministers are Sigrid Kaag (D66, first), Wopke Hoekstra (CDA, second), and Carola Schouten (CU, third).
It was preceded by the Third Rutte cabinet.
Related pages
List of Dutch cabinets
2021 Dutch general election
Other websites
Fourth Rutte cabinet, Parlement.com
Rutte 4
2022 establishments in the Netherlands |
892712 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walworth%20County%2C%20Wisconsin | Walworth County, Wisconsin | Walworth County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2010 census, the population was 102,228. Its county seat is Elkhorn.
References
Wisconsin counties |
892713 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elkhorn%2C%20Wisconsin | Elkhorn, Wisconsin | Elkhorn is a city in Walworth County, Wisconsin, United States. It is located southwest of Milwaukee. 10,084 lived here during the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Walworth County.
References
Cities in Wisconsin
County seats in Wisconsin |
892714 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake%20Geneva%2C%20Wisconsin | Lake Geneva, Wisconsin | Lake Geneva is a city in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. It is in Walworth County and near Geneva Lake. It is about 40 miles southwest of Milwaukee and 65 miles northwest of Chicago.
References
Cities in Wisconsin
Suburbs of Chicago, Illinois |
892715 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geneva%20Lake | Geneva Lake | Geneva Lake (Potawatomi: Kishwauketoe, "Clear Water") is a freshwater lake in Walworth County in southeastern Wisconsin. The city of Lake Geneva is near the lake and named after it.
References
Lakes of the United States
Wisconsin |
892730 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanxugueiras | Tanxugueiras | Tanxugueiras is a Spanish girl group formed by Aida Tarrío and the twin sisters Olaia and Sabela Maneiro. They started working together in 2016 and sing mostly in Galician.
The name of the group comes from a place name. This is the name of some estates in the parish of Fumaces, in the municipality of Riós and is related to badgers ("teixugos" or "tanxugos" in Galician).
Despite their repertoire they try to give the pieces a modern sound, which brings it closer to the style of world music or even pop. It also seeks to emphasize issues such as women's empowerment.
Career
The fame of the Tanxugueiras began long before they released their first album. In early 2017, a video went viral on social media featuring bakers before a concert with the supergroup A Banda das Crechas in Glasgow.
2018: Tanxugueiras
In the spring of 2018 they released their first album with the same name as the group, Tanxugueiras. This one won the MIN Prize of Disc in Galician 2018. The presentation single was "Que non me neguen", in which they had the collaboration of Guadi Galego. This same year, they released a rock single called "Critical Culture" in which they collaborated with NAO and the rap group SonDaRúa. They also collaborated with the Scottish folk group Shooglenifty on the song "East West". During their tour they visited stages in various places such as Cuba, India, Switzerland and Scotland.
2019: Contrapunto
In mid-2019 they were awarded the Martín Códax Music Prize in the category of Galician traditional music and folk. The second album, Contrapunto, was released in November under the Calaverita Records and PlayPlan label. It was produced by Tanxugueiras with the collaboration of Isaac Palacín (from Berrogüetto) who also plays drums. Along with pieces closer to traditional music, such as "Perfidia" or "Miña Nai", other music such as "Malquerenza" or "Desposorio" have sounds reminiscent of pop or even electronic music.
2020-2021: New award and new music
In 2020 they receive the award for the Best Adaptation of a Traditional Piece in the XIX Opinión de Música de Raíz Awards. Contrapunto is also recognized as one of the best records in the World Music Charts Europe.
In his works of the year 2021, an evolution is perceived towards the fusion between traditional music and sounds close to trap and electronic music. One of his singles from that year, "Figa", was chosen in a non-binding vote among fans of the contest as a favorite theme to participate in the 2022 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest . On 10 December, TVE confirmed its presence among the fourteen shortlisted artists who will compete for a place at the Benidorm Festival. In accordance with the rules of the contest, for their participation they presented an unpublished topic entitled Terra (Earth), sung in Galician language (variant related to Portuguese spoken in Galicia), with the refrain "non hai fronteiras" (there are no frontiers) repeated in Castilian-Spanish, Basque and Catalan, co-official languages in Spain, and also in Asturian (not co-oficial yet). In less than a week, the video on YouTube reached more than a million views.
2022: Terra and Benidorm Fest
They published a collaboration with Rayden as a new single for their new album t. Also they take part on the Benidorm Fest 2021.
Discography
The first album, Tanxugueiras, was released in 2018. Has the following eleven tracks, in this order:
"Ai a ribeira"
"Non cho sei"
"Aldeiña de Moscoso"
"Bembibre"
"Tanxugueiras"
"A de sempre"
"En Piornedo"
"Hermillans"
"Que non mo neguen"
"Oleró"
"Glasgow"
The second album, Contrapunto, was released in 2019. It has ten themes, in that order:
"Autocracia"
"Albedrío"
"Perfidia"
"Irmandade"
"Miña Nena"
"Miña Nai"
"O Querer"
"Malquerenza"
"Desposorio"
"Maltraer"
In June 2020, with the rooster of Music Day, they released the single "Telo". In February 2021 they released a new track with the collaboration of Xisco Feijoo, "Midas" , and in July 2021 they released "Figa".
Awards and recognitions
XIX Awards Opinión de Música de Raíz 2020 (Best adaptation of a traditional piece)
World Music Charts Europe 2020 (Top 20 World Music Records in May 2020)
Contest aRi (t) mar Galicia and Portugal 2019 (Best Music of Galicia 2019)
Mestre Mateo Awards for Galician Audiovisual 2019 (Finalists Best Music-Video for Perfidia )
Scots Trad Music Awards 2019 (Finalists in the category of Best Video with Shooglenifty)
MIN Independent Music Awards 2019 (Finalists Best Galician Album)
Martín Códax Music Awards 2019 (Best Traditional and Folk Music Group)
MIN Independent Music Awards 2018 (Best Galician Album)
References
External links
Galician people
World music
Folk music groups
Folk musicians
Celtic peoples
Spanish musical groups |
892733 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahamstra%3A%20Part%20One%3A%20Shiva | Brahamstra: Part One: Shiva | Brahmāstra Part One: Shiva (also known as Brahmāstra) is an upcoming Indian Hindi-language superhero film written and directed by Ayan Mukerji, and produced by Karan Johar. It stars Amitabh Bachchan, Ranbir Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Mouni Roy and Nagarjuna Akkineni. The film is intended to serve as the first film in a planned three-parter trilogy.
Premise
The film is set in two time frames. The main story's set in present times where Shiva, a young man with superpowers who travels 3000 years back in time to the pre-Mahabharatha era to learn about weapons like Brahmastra in order to fulfil a mission in the present time.
Cast
Amitabh Bachchan as Prof. Arvind Chaturvedi
Ranbir Kapoor as Shiva Tripathi
Alia Bhatt as Isha Mishra
Divyendu Sharma as Naitik Mishra, Isha's husband
Mouni Roy as Damayanti Singhania
Nagarjuna Akkineni as Ajay Vashisht, an archaeologist
Dimple Kapadia as Anita Saxena
Shah Rukh Khan as Dr. Tripathi, a scientist and Shiva's father (special appearance)
References |
892734 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/OMG%21%20%28Oh%20My%20God%21%29%202 | OMG! (Oh My God!) 2 | OMG! (Oh My God!) 2 is an upcoming Indian Hindi-language satirical comedy-drama film written and directed by Amit Rai. It is a spiritual sequel to Umesh Shukla's 2012 film OMG! (Oh My God!). It stars Akshay Kumar, Pankaj Tripathi, Arun Govil and Yami Gautam in the lead roles. The film revolves around the subject of a Indian education system.
Cast
Akshay Kumar as Lord Shiva
Pankaj Tripathi
Arun Govil as Lord Rama
Yami Gautam
References
Other websites
2022 movies
Indian movies
Upcoming movies
Action thriller movies |
892737 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas%20Leonicus%20Thomaeus | Nicholas Leonicus Thomaeus | Nicholas Leonicus Thomaeus (, ; 1456–1531) was a Greek teacher of philosophy at the University of Padua in the Republic of Venice.
Biography
Thomaeus was born to a Greek family in Venice, Italy on February 1, 1456. He studied Greek philosophy and literature under the guidance of Demetrios Chalkokondyles in Florence, Italy. In 1497, the University of Padua chose Thomaeus as its first official lecturer on the Greek text of Aristotle. In 1504, he was elected to succeed Giorgio Valla as headmaster of Greek in Venice but Thomaeus did not take the position seriously. He was succeeded as headmaster by Marcus Musurus in 1512. Beginning in 1524, Thomaeus published series of philosophical discussions in the Latin language. He was admired by scholars such as Desiderius Erasmus for his philology. When the University of Padua was reopened after the wars of the League of Cambrai, Thomaeus taught at the school until he died on March 28, 1531.
Works
Aristotelis Parva quae vocant Naturalia, Bernardino Vitali, Venice 1523.
Trophonius, sive, De divinatione, 1524.
Bembo sive de immortalitate animae, 1524.
Opuscula. Ex Venetiis, Bernardino Vitali, Venice 1525.
Conversio in Latinum atque explanatio primi libri Aristotelis de partibus animalium… nunc primum ex authoris archetypo in lucem aeditus. G. Farri, Venice 1540.
References
Citations
Sources
Further reading
1456 births
1531 deaths |
892743 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neufraunhofen | Neufraunhofen | Neufraunhofen is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892744 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niederaichbach | Niederaichbach | Niederaichbach is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892745 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obers%C3%BC%C3%9Fbach | Obersüßbach | Obersüßbach is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
People
Georg Kaspar Nagler (1801-1866), art historian
References
Landshut (district) |
892746 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfeffenhausen | Pfeffenhausen | Pfeffenhausen is a market town and a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892747 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postau | Postau | Postau is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
Famous residents
Martin Stosch - DSDS Season 4 contestant.
References
Other websites
Postau Official Site
Landshut (district) |
892749 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rottenburg%20an%20der%20Laaber | Rottenburg an der Laaber | Rottenburg an der Laaber is a town in Landshut, in Bavaria, Germany. It is on the river Große Laber, 21 km northwest of Landshut.
Notable residents
Max Ritter von Müller (1887-1918), World War I fighter ace and highest scoring Bavarian in the war
References
Other websites
Landshut (district) |
892750 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schalkham | Schalkham | Schalkham is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892751 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiefenbach%2C%20Landshut | Tiefenbach, Landshut | Tiefenbach is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany. The river Isar flows through the municipality.
References
Landshut (district) |
892752 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velden%20%28Vils%29 | Velden (Vils) | Velden is a market town and municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Velden is on the border from Lower Bavaria to Upper Bavaria. The river Vils runs through the town. Velden is about 64 kilometers northeast of Munich.
The municipality consists of 130 villages and communes
Sister cities
Roana, Italy, since 1976
Aigrefeuille-d'Aunis, France, since 1986
References
Other websites
Official website
Landshut (district) |
892753 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vilsbiburg | Vilsbiburg | Vilsbiburg (, regional: Vib [fɪb]) is a town on the river Große Vils, 18 km southeast of Landshut, in the district of Landshut, in Bavaria, Germany. The city gives its name to the river Große Vils which runs through Vilsbiburg. As of 2019 Vilsbiburg has 12,203 residents.
Geography
Vilsbiburg is in the center of Lower Bavaria and is part of the Alpine foothills. The river Vils runs through the town center. Vilsbiburg is about 55 miles northeast of Munich.
References
Other websites
(German)
Unofficial website (German)
Landshut (district) |
892754 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vilsheim | Vilsheim | Vilsheim is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892755 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weihmichl | Weihmichl | Weihmichl is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892756 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weng%2C%20Bavaria | Weng, Bavaria | Weng is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892757 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/W%C3%B6rth%20an%20der%20Isar | Wörth an der Isar | Wörth an der Isar is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892758 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wurmsham | Wurmsham | Wurmsham is a municipality in Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Landshut (district) |
892761 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altenkunstadt | Altenkunstadt | Altenkunstadt is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria, Germany. It is on the left or south edge of the river Main across the valley from Burgkunstadt which is on the hillside to the north.
Sons and daughters
Wolfgang Mack (1808-1883), German surgeon
Alfred Nikolaus Witt (1914-1999), orthopedist and surgeon, university professor in Berlin and Munich
Josef Seiz (1934-2010), German table tennis player
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892765 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burgkunstadt | Burgkunstadt | Burgkunstadt is a town in Lichtenfels, in northern Bavaria, Germany. It is on the right edge of the Main, 15 km west of Kulmbach, and 24 km southeast of Coburg.
References
Other websites
Lichtenfels (district) |
892766 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebensfeld | Ebensfeld | Ebensfeld is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany. It is on the river Main.
Sons and daughters of the town
Georg Meixner (1887-1960), German Catholic priest and Bavarian politician
Rudolf Lunkenbein (1939-1976), German Salesian and missionary in Brazil
Johann Andreas Seelmann (1732-1789), was from 1771 until his death Bishop in the Diocese of Speyer
Johann Baptist Dietz (1879-1959), was a Roman Catholic theologian and 1939-1958 Bishop of the diocese Fulda
Adam Senger (1860-1935), was auxiliary bishop of Bamberg
References
Other websites
Lichtenfels (district) |
892767 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasrollah%20Radesh | Nasrollah Radesh | Nasrollah Radesh (Persian: نصرالله رادش; born 3 December 1966) is an Iranian actor.
Early life
Radesh was born on December 3, 1966 in Abadan, Iran to an ethnic Persian family.
career
He began his acting career with Parvaz 57, invited by Iranian director, Mehran Modiri.
Sculpture
Radesh held his first sculpture exhibition at Aliha Gallery and second sculpture exhibition at Lilit Gallery called Sooratak, and expressed his interest in sculpture last few years, which he influenced his acting.
Filmography
Panchari (1993 - Hormoz Hedayat)
Parvaz 57 (1994 - Mehran Modiri)
Saat Khosh (1994 - Mehran Modiri)
Saal Khosh (1995 - Mehran Modiri)
Havaye Tazeh (1996 - Mohammad Rahmanian)
Salam Salam (1997 - Seyed Ali Semnani)
Gol Man Goli (1997 - Ghasem Jafari)
Roozegar Javani (1998 - Shapoor Gharib)
Shabzadegan (1999 - Mohsen Mohseninasab)
Dardesar Bozorg (1999)
Zir Aseman Shahr (2001 - Mehran Ghafourian)
Tabagheh Vasat (20001 - Mehran Ghafourian)
Ashti Konan (2002 - Majid Salehi)
o+ (2004 - Ali Shah Hatami)
Oxygen (2005 - Mehdi Mazloumi)
Bagh Mozaffar (2006 - Mehran Modiri)
Mard Hezar Chehreh (2008 - Mehran Modiri)
Mard Hezar Chehreh (2008 - Mehran Modiri)
Daftar Mashgh (2009 - Karim Sarbakhsh)
Mosaferan (2009 - Rambod Javan)
Khane Ejarei (2011 - Ramin Naser Nasir)
Kasi Khabe? (2011 - Seyed Javad Razavian)
Dar Hashieh (2014 - Mehran Modiri)
Dar Hashieh 2 (2015 - Mehran Modiri)
Mahale Gol Bolbol (2018 - Ahmad Darvishalipour)
Donyaye Gomshodeh (2019 - Amin Amani)
Shirhaye Javan (1999 - Mohsen Mohseninasab)
Sareto Bedozd Refigh (2005 - Ali Abdoulalizadeh)
Nezam Az Rast (2008 - Mohammadreza Varazi)
Khande Dar Baran (2011 - Darioush Farhang)
Faza Navardan (2006 - Peyman Ghasemkhani)
Ganj Mozaffar (2012 - Mehran Modiri)
Shookhi Kardam (2013 - Mehran Modiri)
Atse (2015 - Mehran Modiri)
Sham Irani (2020 - Saeid Aboutaleb)
References
Other websites
1965 births
Living people
Iranian actors |
892768 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois%20Chaumette | François Chaumette | François Chaumette is a French actor, born September 8, 1923 in Paris 14th and died February 27, 1996 in Paris 13th.
References
Other websites
1923 births
1996 deaths
French actors |
892769 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/O%27Galop | O'Galop | O'Galop, (June 8, 1867 – January 2, 1946) pseudonym of Marius Rossillon, is a French painter, cartoonist, poster designer and director. He was born on June 8, 1867 in Lyon and died January 2, 1946 in Carsac (Dordogne).
References
Other websites
1867 births
1946 deaths |
892780 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsway%20underpass | Kingsway underpass | Kingsway Underpass may refer to:
The Kingsway Tunnel in Liverpool
The former Kingsway tramway subway in Holborn
The Strand underpass in London |
892787 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Female%20submission | Female submission | Certain women will submit to their partner. In this case the woman will allow her partner to use her body for his sexual pleasure. Very often, the activity is associated with BDSM, the S in BDSM can stand for submission. This practice is known as female submission or femsub. The submission is consensual, the woman wants to submit, and also gets sexual pleasure from doing so. Usually, submission requires a degree of trust. The partner the woman submits to (called 'dominant') is a man, most of the time. There are setups where there may be more than one dominant partner. The woman may also get emotional gratification from submitting and giving control to her trusted partner.
A 1985 study suggested that about three out of ten people taking part in BDSM activities were women. A 2015 study indicates that 61.7% of females who are active in BDSM preferred a submissive role, 25.7% consider themselves a switch (they take both roles), while 12.6% prefer the dominant role. In contrast, 46.6% of men prefer the submissive role, 24% consider themselves to be switches and 29.5% prefer the dominant role.
Eroticism
Submission can take different forms. One form is to be passive and to do what the partner wants. This may mean that the partner is able to start all sexual activities, and to control the sex positions used. It can also be about the type of sexual activities the partners do: Not all foreplay leads to coitus (anal sex, sexual roleplay or BDSM doesn't). In some cases, the woman needs to be passive, while the man performs a sex act on her. Letting the partner do that can also be seen as a form of submission.Doing what the parner says may be a part of a sexual roleplay or activity, and can also be in the relation to the style of dress, if any, or behavior or any other manner. Anything, were the woman is passive can be seen as submissive behaviour. As an example, the woman will let her lover undress her.
Submission can show in different ways: In all cases, the woman gives up sexual or personal control to another person. Examples are acts of servitude, submission to humiliation or punishment such as erotic spanking, or other activities, at times in association with bondage. Female submission can take the form of engaging in sexual activity with a person other than her normal partner, as in the case of swinging, non-monogamy or prostitution. Some women choose to include occasional sexual submission in an otherwise conventional sex life. For example, a woman may adopt a submissive role during a sexual activity to overcome a sexual inhibition she may have. A woman may choose to submit full-time, becoming a lifestyle slave.
Some people get erotic pleasure from their sex partner acting in a sumissive manner. For them i is a turn-on. Other people regard obvious passivity as a form of feminine flirting or seduction. Some women submit to the sexual wishes of their partner for the pleasure of the partner, which may itself result in sexual pleasure for the submissive woman.
In literature
Female submission and conquest are very common themes in traditional literature. When they are married, many man see their wives as subordinate; in that view, a woman is defenceless in society, and has to submit to men.
Story of O, published in 1954 in French, is an erotic tale of female submission involving a beautiful Parisian fashion photographer named O, who is taught to be constantly available for all forms of sex, offering herself to any male.
Wonder Woman's original key weakness was permitting herself to be bound by a man. While this exploitable weakness has since been retconned out of continuity by DC comics, it was absolutely key to the character Dr. Marston, an ardent feminist and practicing psychologist, was creating. His point was that women are not actually inferior to men, they are oppressed. The only reason they are "weaker" is because they allow men to make them so.
Related pages
Domination & submission (BDSM)
Dominatrix
Fifty Shades of Grey (movie)
References
Further reading
Submissive Women - Tales of Female Submission by Monique Lassen. ASIN: B006WBRN9C.
Henryson, Dean (2014). ″Girl Fighting Exposed.″ Createspace. ISBN 978-1493767496.
Pages using multiple image with auto scaled images
Pages with unreviewed translations
BDSM |
892791 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicopee%2C%20Massachusetts | Chicopee, Massachusetts | Chicopee ( ) is a city in Hampden County, Massachusetts, United States. As of the 2020 census, 55,560 people lived there.
Other websites
Chicopee local news and community events
Chicopee Public Library
Cities in Massachusetts
1640 establishments
1640s establishments in Massachusetts |
892792 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hochstadt%20am%20Main | Hochstadt am Main | Hochstadt am Main is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany. It is on the river Main.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892795 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marktgraitz | Marktgraitz | Marktgraitz is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892797 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marktzeuln | Marktzeuln | Marktzeuln is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany. It is on the river Rodach.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892798 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michelau%20in%20Oberfranken | Michelau in Oberfranken | Michelau is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892799 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redwitz%20an%20der%20Rodach | Redwitz an der Rodach | Redwitz an der Rodach is a municipality in Lichtenfels in Bavaria in Germany. It is on the river Rodach.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892800 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weismain | Weismain | Weismain is a town in Lichtenfels, in northern Bavaria, Germany. It is 15 km west of Kulmbach, and 15 km southeast of Lichtenfels.
References
Lichtenfels (district) |
892802 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dance%20Monkey | Dance Monkey | Dance Monkey is a 2019 song by the Australian singer Tones And I. It is on her album "The Kids Are Coming". The song was rekeased 10 May 2019. It was the second single frim the album and her first single in the United States.
2019 songs |
892803 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnstein | Arnstein | Arnstein () is a town in Main-Spessart in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany.
Geography
Location
The town is on the edges of the river Wern and is about 20 km from Schweinfurt and 25 km from Würzburg.
Constituent communities
Arnstein's Stadtteile are:
References
Other websites
Main-Spessart |
892806 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine%20Barrens%20%28New%20Jersey%29 | Pine Barrens (New Jersey) | The Pine Barrens or Pinelands are a place in New Jersey in the eastern United States. They are in the southern part of the state. Sometimes the word "Pinelands" only means the Pinelands Natural Reserve.
Size
The Pinelands Natural Reserve is a large part of the Pine Barrens. It is 1.1 million acres in size. They are 22 percent of all New Jersey's area. Not all of the Pine Barrens are in the Pinelands Natural Reserve.
Ecology
The United States Congress made the Pine Barrens Natural Reserve in 1988.
Because there is so much sand and acid in the soil, people did not want to make farms in the Pine Barrens. But the water in the Pine Barrens was very pure. Sea captains liked to take water from the Pine Barrens with them on long trips because it did not go bad quickly. The iron in the soil and tannin chemicals from the cedar trees kept bacteria from turning the water bad.
Sometimes the Atlantic white cedar trees die. This is because salt water rises into the Pine Barrens. It has happened many times, but the trees eventually come back. Scientists think that climate change might mean the trees will die and not grow back.
History
Some of the people who moved to the Pine Barrens in the 1700s were Quakers who had fought in the American Revolution. The other Quakers had thrown them out because Quakers are not supposed to kill other human beings. British loyalists also came to the Pine Barrens in the 1700s. Outlaws and other criminals came too.
In 1913, Elizabeth Kite wrote about the pine barrens, saying the people there were uneducated and many were criminals. Later, she said she regretted writing this because instead of helping the people in the pine barrens, newspapers made things worse.
In 1954, the Chatsworth Fire burned 19,500 acres of the Pine Barrens.
Industry
People in the Pine Barrens made charcoal, glass, cabinets, paper, and bricks. In the 1800s and 1900s, people came to the Pine Barrens to find jobs.
Legends
Legends say that a creature called the Jersey Devil lives in the Pine Barrens.
References
Geography of the United States
New Jersey |
892808 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine%20barrens | Pine barrens | For the place in New Jersey that is also called the Pine Barrens, see Pine Barrens (New Jersey).
Pine barrens are a type of habitat. It is a place where a few pine trees grow. A pine barren does not have enough trees to be a forest. A pine barren is one type of savannah. There are pine barrens in the eastern half of North America, in the United States and Canada.
Soil and plants
The soil in a pine barren has a lot of acid and sand in it. Water flows through the soil instead of staying in it. Pine barren soil does not make good farms.
Because pine barrens have fires, droughts, and frost during the growing season, the trees never grow enough to form a canopy. They never form a "roof" that stops the sunlight. That means that sunlight can touch the ground in a pine barren. That means that small plants that need a lot of light can grow there.
The trees in pine barrens can be jack pine, pitch pine, red pine, and some white pine. Northern pin oak, black cherry, and aspen can grow in pine barrens, but these trees do not grow as tall as they do in other places. Many shrubs, grasses, and ferns also grow in pine barrens. For example, there can be blueberries, bracken fern, and reindeer lichen. Most of the plants in the pine barren have some special thing or ability that helps them with fire. For example, the pitch pine has thick bark. Its cones open when they are near fire.
Animals
Many animals without bones live in pine barrens. For example, there are butterflies and grasshoppers. Birds that eat these animals live there too.
Geology
Pine barrens form where the ground is not too steep. For example, they form in glacial plains, outwash plains, and lakeplains.
Damage
Human beings can hurt pine barrens by cutting down the pine trees for wood, by bringing plants from other parts of the world there, and by stopping the natural fires. When human beings stop fires, other types of trees can grow in the pine barren, and it becomes a forest instead. Then, the small plants that need a lot of sunlight die.
Other pages
Pine Barrens (New Jersey)
References
Habitats |
892812 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hideyuki%20Mukai | Hideyuki Mukai | (born June 8, 1969) is a Japanese researcher and educator.
Publications
2012(31 May)
References
Other websites
KAKEN
Justia
1969 births
Living people
Educators |
892816 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aura%20im%20Sinngrund | Aura im Sinngrund | Aura im Sinngrund (officially: Aura i. Sinngrund) is a community in Main-Spessart in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany and a member of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (municipal association) of Burgsinn.
Geography
Location
The community is some 20 km northwest of Gemünden am Main in the valley of the Aura river in the Spessart Nature Park (Naturpark Spessart). The community's northern limit forms Bavaria's boundary with Hesse.
Further reading
Historisches Gemeindeverzeichnis für Hessen. Heft 2: Gebietsänderungen der hessischen Gemeinden und Kreise 1834 bis 1967, publisher: Hessian State Statistical Office, Wiesbaden, o.J., p. 56, 95.
Karl Richter: Gemünden = Historischer Atlas von Bayern, Teil Franken 1,11, Munich 1963, UB: 50/2001, 1,11, p. 204f.
Winkopps Zeitschrift: Der Rheinische Bund, Heft 2/4, p. 389-394.
References
Other websites
Community’s official webpage
Aura im Sinngrund as part of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft of Burgsinn
Main-Spessart |
892819 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex%20Parent | Alex Parent | Alexander A. (Alex) Parent was a trade union official and, for one term, was a member of the Ontario Legislative Assembly.
Parent was president of United Auto Workers Local 195 in Windsor, Ontario in the 1940s, and a supporter of the Communist Party of Canada, which at the time was known as the Labor-Progressive Party. In the 1945 Ontario general election, Parent was nominated by the UAW-CIO as one of three Labour candidates in the election. Parent ran in Essex North, George Burt, the UAW's Canadian director, ran in Windsor-Walkerville and Windsor mayor Arthur Reaume ran in Windsor—Sandwich. All three were jointly nominated by the Communist Labor-Progressive Party and the Ontario Liberal Party and ran as Liberal-Labour candidates and targeted ridings held by the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation.
Parent was elected, and initially sat with the Liberal Party but quit the Liberal group in the legislature in January 1946 in order to sit as a "straight Labor representative", working and voting with Labor-Progressive MPPs J.B. Salsberg and A. A. MacLeod.
He remained president of Local 195 until March 1946 when he defeated by Earl Watson by 2,200 votes to 1,600 votes.
Parent did not run in the 1948 Ontario general election, and his riding was re-taken by the CCF.
He died on December 25, 1961, at the age of 53.
References
1908 births
1961 deaths
Members of the Ontario Legislative Assembly |
892820 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1890%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1890 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 6, 1890. Edward Frederick Clarke, was re-elected to his third term in office as Mayor of Toronto, defeating Alderman John McMillan.
Toronto mayor
Results
Edward Frederick Clarke - 10,419
John McMillan - 8,445
References:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Three elected per ward
The Toronto World noted that the new council was "more Conservative than ever" and that "not a single Catholic is an alderman" as both Catholic candidates, Burns in St. Andrew's Ward and Kelly in St. Lawrence, had been defeated.
St. Alban's Ward
George Booth (incumbent) - 480
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 412
Isaac Lennox (incumbent) - 321
Sinclair - 254
William P. Atkinson - 235
Hugh McMath - 155
St. Andrew's Ward
William Carlyle (incumbent)- 878
E. King Dodds (incumbent) - 794
J. E. Verral (incumbent) - 669
William Burns- 682
Henderson - 530
Pells - 506
St. David's Ward
John C. Swait (incumbent) - 1,081
William H. Gibbs (incumbent) - 1,048
Thomas Allen - 962
Richard Wallace - 517
Price - 323
Rothwell - 261
Griffin - 154
St. George's Ward
George E. Gillespie (incumbent) acclaimed
John Maugham (incumbent) acclaimed
George Verral (incumbent) acclaimed
St. James' Ward
James B. Boustead (incumbent) - 1,166
Alfred McDougall (incumbent) - 1,093
Ernest A. Macdonald - 854
Thompson - 623
Hall - 535
Ernest A. Macdonald had previously represented St. Matthew's Ward
St. John's Ward
Frank Moses (incumbent) - 994
R. J. Score - 924
Irwin - 897
G. M. Rose - 857
St. Lawrence Ward
John Hallam (incumbent) - 889
Charles Small - 803
Garrett F. Frankland (incumbent) - 730
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 583
Kelly - 513
St. Mark's Ward
John Ritchie (incumbent) - 517
George Lindsey - 496
Charles Frederick Denison - 390
Barrett - 362
Greyson - 283
Boyle - 163
Sparling - 150
Prittle - 147
Guthrie - 130
St. Matthew's Ward
John Knox Leslie - 562
G. S. Macdonald (incumbent) - 533
Peter Macdonald (incumbent)- 400
Elliott - 275
Graham - 238
Schoff - 182
Pickering - 47
St. Patrick's Ward
John Baxter (incumbent) - 1,755
Miles Vokes (incumbent) - 1,680
John Lucas (incumbent) 1,408
W. J. Little - 1,101
Walker - 476
St. Paul's Ward
W. J. Hill (incumbent) - 792
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 608
John Shaw (incumbent) - 535
Cooper - 456
Huddart - 274
St. Stephen's Ward
William Bell (incumbent) - 1,354
Robert H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,272
John Bailey (incumbent) - 786
Stephen Wilcock - 687
Hubble - 310
Tyler - 308
Brown - 223
St. Thomas' Ward
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 701
Edward Hewitt (incumbent) - 683
Thomas McMullen (incumbent) - 634
William Park - 531
Edward Farquhar - 488
References:
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1890 |
892821 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1888%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1888 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 2, 1888. Edward Frederick Clarke, a Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, defeated Alderman Elias Rogers, owner of a well-known coal and home heating company, and Daniel Defoe, a lawyer and former alderman.
Rogers, a Quaker, was seen as the "temperance [anti-alcohol] candidate for mayor" while Clarke was favoured by tavern and liquor store owners and anti-temperance voters. Clarke's victory, along with the defeat of two liquor bylaws being proposed by referendum (popular vote), were seen as a victory for anti-temperance views.
Toronto mayor
Results
Edward Frederick Clarke - 7,951
Elias Rogers - 7,050
Daniel Defoe - 2,019
References:
Referendum
Votes were held on three planned by-laws, one to approve spending for a "trunk sewer", a second by-law to reduce the number of taverns licensed to serve liquor from 150 to 100, and a third to reduce the number of shops licensed to sell liquor from 50 to 20. All three by-laws were defeated.
Trunk sewer by-law
For - 2,825
Against - 3,737
Tavern license by-law
For - 7,371
Against - 8,187
Shop license by-law
For - 7,743
Against - 8,146
References:
Aldermen elected to city council
St. Andrew's Ward
E. King Dodds (incumbent) - 837
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 822
Thomas Pells - 769
William Burns - 699
J. D. Henderson - 633
James Bond - 519
St. David's Ward
John C. Swait (incumbent) - 1,255
William H. Gibbs - 1,179
Robert J. Fleming (incumbent) - 1,019
J. G. Gibson - 940
Wickett (incumbent) - 770
St. George's Ward
George E. Gillespie (incumbent) - acclaimed
John Maugham (incumbent) - acclaimed
George Verral (incumbent) - acclaimed
St. James' Ward
Alfred McDougall - 1,165
James B. Boustead (incumbent) - 1,017
John McMillan (incumbent) - 1,053
Wallace Millichamp (incumbent) - 774
St. John's Ward
H. L. Piper (incumbent) - 1,025
Irwin (incumbent) - 814
A. H. Gilbert - 679
Frank Moses - 642
R. J. Score - 622
James Thomson - 572
St. Lawrence Ward
Garrett F. Frankland (incumbent) - 733
John Hallam - 634
Morrison (incumbent) - 616
Charles Small - 561
Thomas Thompson - 399
St. Mark's Ward
John Ritchie (incumbent) - 456
Michael J. Woods (incumbent) - 401
Charles Frederick Denison (incumbent) - 410
David D. Christie - 286
James Roney - 245
Robert Brown - 95
St. Matthew's Ward
Jones (incumbent) - 371
Francis E. Galbraith - 308
Peter Macdonald - 295
Ernest A. Macdonald (incumbent) - 247
Ingham (incumbent) - 182:Thomas Foster - 29
St. Patrick's Ward
John Baxter (incumbent) - 1,966
Harvie (incumbent) - 1,467
George J. St. Leger (incumbent) - 1,214
Isaac Wardell - 1,187
St. Paul's Ward
W. J. Hill (incumbent) - acclamation
William Roaf - (incumbent) acclamation
John Shaw (incumbent) - acclamation
St. Stephen's Ward
Johnston (incumbent) - 1,178
William Bell - 1,079
Barton (incumbent) - 1,001
Robert H. Graham (incumbent) - 926
R. W. Prittie - 477
St. Thomas' Ward
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 892
Edward Hewitt - 691
Drayton (incumbent) - 655
Galley (incumbent) - 632
William Park - 375
References:
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1888 |
892823 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1889%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1889 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 7, 1889. Edward Frederick Clarke, was re-elected to a second term as Mayor of Toronto without anyone running against him.
Toronto mayor
Results
Edward Frederick Clarke - acclamation
References:
Referendum
A referendum was held on a by-law to fund a hospital to care for alcoholics. The proposal was defeated.
For - 1,961
Against - 3,902
References:
Aldermen elected to city council
St. Andrew's Ward
E. King Dodds (incumbent) - 798
J. E. Verral - 763
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 732
Pells (incumbent) - 679
Britton - 381
St. David's Ward
Robert J. Fleming (incumbent) - 1,239
William H. Gibbs (incumbent) - 1,010
John C. Swait (incumbent) - 883
Gibson - 843
St. George's Ward
George E. Gillespie (incumbent) - 609
John Maugham (incumbent) - 546
George Verral (incumbent) - 543
Hall - 396
St. James' Ward
Alfred McDougall (incumbent) - 999
John McMillan (incumbent) - 963
James B. Boustead (incumbent) - 939
Steiner - 437
St. John's Ward
Joseph Tait - 693
Frank Moses - 691
A. H. Gilbert (incumbent) - 638
R. J. Score - 605
Piper (incumbent) - 464
Irwin (incumbent) - 421
St. Lawrence Ward
Charles Small - 870
Thomas Davies - 662
Garrett F. Frankland (incumbent) - 622
John Hallam (incumbent) - 598
St. Mark's Ward
John Ritchie (incumbent) - 419
Charles Frederick Denison (incumbent) - 409
Michael J. Woods (incumbent) - 403
McConnell - 224
Boyle - 112
Emerson - 104
St. Matthew's Ward
Ernest A. Macdonald - 447
Francis E. Galbraith (incumbent) - 411
Peter Macdonald (incumbent)- 389
John Knox Leslie - 365
G. S. Macdonald - 344
St. Patrick's Ward
John Baxter (incumbent) - 1,028
Miles Vokes - 998
George J. St. Leger (incumbent) - 781
Weatherton - 780
John Lucas - 362
W. J. Little - 490
St. Paul's Ward
W. J. Hill (incumbent) - acclamation
William Roaf - (incumbent) acclamation
John Shaw (incumbent) - acclamation
St. Stephen's Ward
William Bell (incumbent) - 947
J. Crocker - 937
Robert H. Graham - 925
Tyler - 293
St. Thomas' Ward
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 765
Edward Hewitt (incumbent) - 522
Thomas McMullen - 513
William Park - 444
Rundle - 304
Patton - 137
References:
By-election
During 1889, Parkdale joined the city of Toronto and was added to the municipal ward map as St. Alban's Ward, beginning March 31, 1889. Booth, Lennox, and Gowanlock were elected as aldermen for the new ward.
St. Alban's Ward
George Booth - 499
Isaac Lennox - 433
James Gowanlock - 418
other candidates not reported
References:
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1889 |
892824 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1891%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1891 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 5, 1891. Edward Frederick Clarke, was re-elected to his fourth term in office, defeating former alderman Ernest A. Macdonald.
Toronto mayor
Results
Edward Frederick Clarke - 8,146
Ernest A. Macdonald - 6,953
References:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Three per ward
St. Alban's Ward
Hugh McMath - 506
William P. Atkinson - 458
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 427
George Booth (incumbent) - 295
Edward Turry - 235
St. Andrew's Ward
William Burns 1,049
J. Kerr 817
J. E. Verral (incumbent) 810
William Carlyle (incumbent) 759
St. David's Ward
Thomas Allen (incumbent) 892
W. H. Gibbs (incumbent) 878
Thomas Foster 813
J. S. Boddy 663
Richard Wallace 596
James Walsh 497
J. A. McIllwain 120
St. George's Ward
George E. Gillespie (incumbent) 583
George McMurrich 565
George Verral (incumbent) 509
Cornelius Flanaghan 395
John Maugham (incumbent) 360
St. James' Ward
Alfred McDougall (incumbent) 970
William Middleton Hall 812
J. B. Boustead (incumbent) 791
Wallace Millichamp 689
St. John's Ward
G. M. Rose 879
R. J. Score (incumbent) 731
R. J. Stanley 634
Frank Moses (incumbent) 521
St. Lawrence Ward
Charles Small (incumbent) 952
John Hallam (incumbent) 716
James Pape 678
G. F. Frankland (incumbent) - 615
St. Mark's Ward
George Lindsey (incumbent) 778
Dr. Joseph Orlando Orr 773
John Maloney 675
John James Graham 449
Benjamin Smith 232
John Ritchie 167
St. Matthew's Ward
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) 559
Peter Macdonald (incumbent) 559
W. T. Stewart 519
G. S. Macdonald (incumbent) 503
St. Patrick's Ward
James Joliffe 1,402
John Lucas (incumbent) 1,344
Thomas Pells (incumbent) 666
W. J. Little 604
St. Paul's Ward
John Shaw (incumbent) acclaimed
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) acclaimed
W. J. Hill (incumbent) acclaimed
St. Stephen's Ward
William Bell (incumbent) 1,302
John Bailey (incumbent) 1,166
R. H. Graham (incumbent) 1,132
Stephen Wilcock 933
St. Thomas' Ward
Edward Hewitt (incumbent) 612
William Park 518
Edward Farquhar 505
Thomas McMullen (incumbent) 501
A. H. Rundle 333
References:
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1891 |
892825 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1892%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1892 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 4, 1892. Robert John Fleming, was elected to his first term in office, defeating financier and Board of Trade president Edmund Boyd Osler, John McMillan, and former mayor and Member of Parliament James Beaty.
Toronto mayor
Results
Robert John Fleming - 8,581
Edmund Boyd Osler - 8,204
John McMillan - 4,652
James Beaty - 597
Source:
Plebiscites
Two plebiscites were conducted; one to soften Toronto's blue laws by allowing streetcars to operate on Sundays and a second on having school books provided to students for free.
Sunday streetcars
Yea - 9,950
Nay - 13,997
Free school books
Yea - 11,346
Nay - 7,907
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Wards were redrawn and consolidated for this election meaning some wards had more incumbents running than there were seats. Instead of 13 wards electing three alderman each, there were now six wards, each electing four alderman to sit on Toronto City Council.
First Ward
Charles C. Small (incumbent) - 1,311
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 1,272
George S. Macdonald - 944
W.T. Stewart - 896
Peter Macdonald (incumbent) - 881
T. Allen (incumbent) - 857
J. Pape (incumbent) - 763
Second Ward
John Hallam (incumbent) - 2,163
Daniel Lamb - 2,149
Thomas Foster - 1,530
David Carlyle - 1,519
Edward Hewitt (incumbent) - 1,398
P. O'Connor - 1,071
K. Farquahar (incumbent) - 947
W.W. Park - 946
Third Ward
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,940
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,195
Richard John Score (incumbent) - 2,136
John Shaw (incumbent) - 2,010
John Flett (incumbent) - 1,961
W.J. Hill (incumbent) - 1,944
G.M. Rose (incumbent) - 1,924
William N. Hall - 930
Ernest A. Macdonald - 523
Fourth Ward
William Carlyle - 2,795
William Burns (incumbent) - 2,451
James Jolliffe (incumbent) - 2,225
George Verral (incumbent) - 2,090
Frederick Phillips (incumbent) - 1,912
John Lucas - 1,521
Fifth Ward
William Bell (incumbent) - 2,339
Thomas Crawford - 1,870
R.H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,843
John Bailey (incumbent) - 1,635
J.E. Verral (incumbent) - 1,363
T.K Rogers - 906
Peter Whittock - 484
John Mulvey - 238
Charles T. Pearce - 160
Sixth Ward
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 1,215
W.F. Atkinson (incumbent) - 1,201
Dr. J. O. Orr (incumbent) - 1,143
John Maloney (incumbent) - 1,096
William Crealock (incumbent) - 1,033
Hugh MacMath (incumbent) - 986
Thomas Murray - 799
George B. Boyle - 235
Source: and
References
Aldermanic results taken from the January 5, 1892, Toronto Globe and might not exactly match final tallies.
Municipal elections in Toronto
1892 |
892826 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1893%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1893 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 2, 1893. Mayor Robert John Fleming, was re-elected to a second term in office, defeating Warring Kennedy.
Toronto mayor
Results
Robert John Fleming (incumbent) - 11,736
Warring Kennedy - 8,618
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards.
First Ward
C.C. Small (incumbent) - 1,275
W.T. Stewart (incumbent) - 1,087
Thomas Davies - 1,033
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 1,010
G.S. Macdonald (incumbent) - 987
W. Barrett - 697
Second Ward
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 2,110
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,955
Garratt F. Frankland - 1.412
Edward Hewitt - 1,379
David Carlyle (incumbent) - 1,214
Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 1,205
Daniel Kelly - 1,135
George Taunt - 114
Third Ward
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 3,094
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,535
John Shaw (incumbent) - 2,474
John Brown - 2,405
W.J. Hill - 2,380
Ernest A. Macdonald - 346
Fourth Ward
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 2,292
William Burns (incumbent) - 2,266
James Jolliffe (incumbent) - 1,966
George Verral (incumbent) - 1,634
Wm. P. Hubbard - 1,626
A.F. Jury - 1,316
Fifth Ward
William Bell (incumbent) - 2,252
Thomas Crawford (incumbent) - 2,027
John Bailey (incumbent) - 2,002
J.E. Verral - 1,530
R.H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,409
A. Pearce - 110
Sixth Ward
Dr. J.O. Orr (incumbent) - 1,456
Dr. Adam Lynd - 1,397
John Maloney (incumbent) - 1,096
Thomas Murray - 1,042
W.F. Atkinson (incumbent) - 935
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 835
John H. Graham - 224
George G. Miles - 120
Source: and
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1893 |
892827 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1894%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1894 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 1, 1894. Warring Kennedy was elected, defeating Mayor Robert John Fleming, who was seeking a third term. Kennedy's upset was credited to the increased turnout by Methodists due to the plebiscite on Prohibition as well as the strong organized support for Kennedy by the Protestant Protective Association and the Orange Order.
Toronto mayor
Results
Warring Kennedy - 13,830
Robert John Fleming (incumbent) - 9,306
Source:
Plebiscite
Under the Prohibition Plebiscite Act, a plebiscite was held across the province, in conjunction with municipal elections, on the prohibition of the importation, manufacture, and sale alcohol. For this plebiscite, unmarried women, and widows, were allowed to vote - approximately 5,000 women in Toronto - of which 1,117 did so. Men and women were given different colours, which were counted separately. The plebiscite did not result in the enactment of prohibition legislation by the province, however, as in 1896, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council disallowed provincial authority over the importation of alcohol.
Prohibition
For - 10,532 (men); 875 (women) - 11,407 (total)
Against - 8,637 (men); 242 (women) - 8,879 (total)
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. Seven aldermen from the outgoing Toronto City Council retired while 17 sought re-election. Of those, 12 were re-elected and five were defeated.
First Ward
W.T. Stewart (incumbent) - 1,098
Thomas Allen - 1,024
H.R. Frankland - 927
C.C. Small (incumbent) - 905
Peter Macdonald - 901
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 862
Ernest A. Macdonald - 805
E.A. Forster - 580
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 536
S.A. Heakes - 336
Second Ward
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,997
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,942
Thomas Hewitt (incumbent) - 1,401
P.H. Drayton - 1,065
George Anderson - 1,029
Thomas Foster - 1,027
Francis Stephens Spence - 1,020
Daniel Kelly - 936
David Carlyle - 892
Adam Beatty - 434
Third Ward
John Shaw (incumbent) - 3,649
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,472
J. Enoch Thompson - 2,117
O.B. Sheppard - 1,887
R.L. Fraser - 1,726
Richard John Score - 1,616
W.R. Clarke - 886
C.A. Muerrie - 305
Fourth Ward
William Burns (incumbent) - 2,011
Wm. P. Hubbard - 1,993
James Jolliffe (incumbent) - 1,600
James Crane - 1,458
George Verral (incumbent) - 1,381
W.G. Harris - 1,123
John McCaffrey - 1,014
M. B. Alison - 986
Alex R. Williamson - 960
John Ward - 511
John Dill - 340
Fifth Ward
Thomas Crawford (incumbent) - 2,671
John Bailey (incumbent) - 2,015
John Dunn - 1,960
Andrew Bates - 1,635
Daniel Kennedy - 841
Francis H. Woods - 821
Alanson Cody Winton - 481
John Aldridge - 349
William J. Smith - 282
J.B. Hay - 116
Lindsay - 30
Sixth Ward
W.F. Atkinson 1,212
John J. Graham 1,105
James Gowanlock - 897
Thomas Murray (incumbent) - 894
J.E. Verral (incumbent) - 732
John Maloney (incumbent) - 719
Sturgeon Stewart - 699
H.M. East - 643
Charles L. Denison - 592
John F. McCrae - 583
Source: and
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1894 |
892828 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1895%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1895 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 8, 1895. Mayor Warring Kennedy was narrowly elected to a second term in office, narrowly defeating former mayor Robert John Fleming, in a rematch of the previous year's election. Kennedy was re-elected based on support from the Protestant Protective Association and the Orange Order. The main issue in the election was a proposal championed by former alderman Ernest A. Macdonald to build an aqueduct or canal linking the Humber River with Georgian Bay; with opponents of the scheme being returned to council while proponents were defeated.
Toronto mayor
Results
Warring Kennedy (incumbent) - 10,260
Robert John Fleming - 10,212
vote totals are after recounts
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. Fourteen incumbents were re-elected; four rookie alderman were elected and four candidates who were not on council in 1894 but had been in previous years, returned.
First Ward
Thomas Allen (incumbent) - 1,149
Edward Blong - 1,099
John Knox Leslie- 992
H.R. Frankland (incumbent) - 954
C.C. Small (incumbent) - 840
William Barrett - 784
Peter Macdonald (incumbent) - 661
Harry Ellis - 442
G.S. Macdonald - 323
Second Ward
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,756
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,635
Joseph Oliver - 1,398
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 1,339
Francis S. Spence - 1,298
George Anderson - 1,039
Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 1,026
Dr. Samuel G. Thompson - 925
William L. Beale - 643
Ewart Farquahar - 535
James O'Hara - 202
Joseph A. Livingstone - 40
Third Ward
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,507
John Shaw 2,410
Bernard Saunders - 1,888
O.B. Sheppard (incumbent) - 1,759
James B. Boustead- 1,751
Wallace Millichamp - 1,185
J.A. Proctor - 927
A.G. McLean - 877
Frank Somers - 854
R.L. Fraser - 818
Ernest A. Macdonald - 693
Dr. McCully - 249
Fourth Ward
William Burns (incumbent) - 2,217
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,213
James Crane (incumbent) - 1,839
James Jolliffe (incumbent) -1,189
B. Alison - 1,084
George Verral - 979
A.F. Jury - 903
Thompson Porter - 795
Alex R. Williamson - 697
George Williams - 512
Henry Cohen - 353
Fifth Ward
Robert H. Graham - 1,638
William Bell - 1,595
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,587
Andrew Bates (incumbent) - 1,098
Arthur R. Denison - 1,001
William Dunlop - 630
Dr. A. Noxon - 622
L.K. Munro - 569
George Evans - 244
John Ward - 244
William J. Smith - 180
Louis Richey - 88
James S. Martin - 87
Sixth Ward
James Scott - 1,391
Thomas Murray (incumbent) - 1,094
Gorge Gilbert Rowe - 1,009
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 849
Charles L. Denison - 745
Henry M. East - 597
W.J. Peck - 444
John C. McLean - 353
J.R. Code - 281
Thomas Lilly - 279
Arthur Bollard - 173
Dr. John Hunter - 157
R.H. Holmes - 40
Source: and
References
1895 elections in Canada
Municipal elections in Toronto
1895 in Ontario |
892829 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1896%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1896 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 6, 1896. Former mayor Robert John Fleming was elected, defeating Alderman John Shaw. Fleming was considered a reformer while Shaw was considered the candidates of the Conservative establishment.
Toronto mayor
Results
Robert John Fleming - 10,281
John Shaw - 8,583
Source:
Board of Control
Legislation was passed in the Ontario legislature in early April 1896 creating a Board of Control was a reform measure to serve as a cabinet or executive committee for the city. On April 20, 1896, three Controllers were elected by Toronto City Council from among its members, and presided over by the mayor. Aldermen Graham, Lamb, and McMurrich were elected to sit on the body.
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. All 19 aldermen seeking re-election were successful.
First Ward
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 1,075
C.C. Small - 1,058
Ernest A. Macdonald - 1,035 (subsequently disqualified)
Thomas Allen (incumbent) - 1,031
J.A. Purvis - 861
W.T. Stewart -640
Elgin Schoff - 426
Macdonald was unseated by the court in March 1896 as a result of a finding that he was not a qualified candidate at the time of his election as he did not own property that qualified him to hold office in the First Ward, as required by the Municipal Act. A new election was ordered and John Russell was elected to fill the vacant sat.
Second Ward
Francis S. Spence - 1,562
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,518
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 1,511
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,320
Dr. Samuel Thompson - 1,150
Thomas Foster - 1,008
William L. Beale - 1,027
Isaac G. Johnson - 595
John Murphy - 39
Third Ward
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,381
O.B. Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,379
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,363
James B. Boustead- 1,994
Wallace Millichamp - 1,652
J. Enoch Thompson - 1,146
Fourth Ward
William Burns (incumbent) - 2,356
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,058
James Crane (incumbent) - 1,835
James Jolliffe (incumbent) -1,448
John McCaffrey - 1,093
John Lester - 583
Robert P. Hall - 485
Frank Sexton -283
Fifth Ward
William Bell (incumbent) - 1,508
W.T.R. Preston - 1,441
Robert H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,388
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,194
Arthur R. Denison - 998
Francis H. Woods - 987
Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh - 809
Sixth Ward
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 1,075
James Scott (incumbent) - 965
G.G. Rowe - 954
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 933
Adam Lynd M.D. - 816
C.L. Denison - 781
Dr. John Hunter - 579
Thomas W. Todd - 360
Source: and
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1896 |
892830 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1897%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1897 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 4, 1897. Mayor Robert John Fleming was re-elected, defeating Alderman George McMurrich. Fleming's principal campaign pledge was a promise to build a bridge to extend the street railway system to the Toronto Islands, as well as readjusting water rates and reorganizing the boards of education. This was Fleming's fourth mayoral victory, his second in a row. He pledged that this would be his final term in office
Toronto mayor
Results
Robert John Fleming (incumbent) - 11,960
George McMurrich - 10,375
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was elected by Toronto City Council from among its members, and presided over by the mayor. At the first council meeting following the general election, council chose Aldermen Graham, Lamb, and Leslie to sit on the body, presided over by the mayor.
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on authorizing the spending of $275,000 on the completion of the municipal court house and $26,000 for a water main on Front Street. There was also a vote on moving future elections to New Year's Day.
Court House
Yea - 4,635
Nay - 2,196
Water Main
Yea - 4,233
Nay - 2,573
New Year's Day election date
Yea - 16,465
Nay - 4,802
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. Six incumbent aldermen were defeated in the election.
First Ward
John Russell (incumbent) - 950
Thomas Allen (incumbent) - 944
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 936
James Frame - 907
T.S. Lobb - 886
C.C. Small (incumbent) - 728
Samuel H. Defries - 546
Elgin Schoff - 434
Ed Blong - 420
T.E. Washington - 411
George Wellings - 321
Thomas Cummings - 125
Second Ward
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,693
Francis S. Spence (incumbent) - 1,687
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,371
William L. Beale - 1,281
Thomas Bryce - 1,242
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 1,207
Thomas Foster - 1,131
P.H. Drayton - 1,114
Dr. Samuel Thompson - 946
David Carlyle - 814
Third Ward
A.F. Rutter - 2,856
John Shaw - 2,856
O.B. Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,827
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,718
James B. Boustead (incumbent) -2,001
Ernest A. Macdonald - 991
John S. Lucas - 686
Fourth Ward
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,798
Wm. Burns (incumbent) - 2,621
James Crane (incumbent) - 1,777
William Carlyle - 1,543
James Jolliffe (incumbent) -1,354
H.E. Trent - 1,291
F.W. Unitt - 1,221
J.E. Verral - 941
Robert P. Hall - 536
James Langdon - 340
D.H. Watt - 89
Fifth Ward
Robt. H. Graham (incumbent) - 2,042
W.T.R. Preston (incumbent) - 1,778
Francis H. Woods - 1,746
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,643
William Bell (incumbent) - 1,609
A.R. Denison - 1,412
Sixth Ward
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 1,566
James Scott (incumbent) - 1,153
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 1,042
Adam Lynd M.D. - 947
James M. Bowman - 931
J. Harvey Hall - 834
Hugh MacMath - 751
George Gilbert Rowe (incumbent) - 518
Joseph Pocock - 500
Source: and
References
Municipal elections in Toronto
1897 |
892831 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1898%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1898 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 3, 1898. Mayor John Shaw was first elected mayor by Toronto City Council after his predecessor, Robert John Fleming, resigned on August 5, 1897 to accept an appointment as assessment commissioner. Shaw was returned to office in the 1898 election by defeating former alderman Ernest A. Macdonald, who was making his second attempt to be elected mayor. The main issues of both the mayoralty and aldermanic campaigns were a proposal to build the James Bay Railway from Toronto to James Bay and proposals to get cheap hydroelectric power from Niagara Falls so that the city could have access to cheap electricity, with Shaw favouring both proposals, along with almost all aldermen who were elected.
Toronto mayor
Results
John Shaw (incumbent) - 12,602
Ernest A. Macdonald - 8,462
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was elected by Toronto City Council from among its members, and presided over by the mayor. At the first council meeting following the general election, council chose Aldermen Burns, Hubbard, and Leslie to sit on the body, presided over by the mayor.
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on abolishing tax exemptions, however, the measure needed approval by the provincial government in order to be implemented.
Results
Yea - 11,331
Nay - 5,175
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. Five incumbent aldermen were defeated in the election while an additional four did not stand for re-election.
First Ward
F.A. Richardson - 1,226
James Frame (incumbent) - 1,140
Henry R. Frankland - 955
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 835
William T. Stewart - 724
John Russell (incumbent) - 684
Thomas Allen (incumbent) - 626
T.E. Washington - 609
Samuel H. Defries - 296
George Wellings - 263
Second Ward
T. Bryce - 1,934
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,724
Thomas Davies - 1,599
John Hallam (incumbent) - 1,490
Francis S. Spence (incumbent) - 1,365
Thomas Foster - 954
W.L. Beale (incumbent) - 929
John Watson -591
E.W.D. Butler - 342
James O'Hara - 125
George Duffy - 85
Third Ward
George McMurrich - 2,303
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,300
O.B. Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,141
Richard John Score - 1,598
J.B. Boustead - 1,402
A.F. Webster - 1,334
James Allison - 1,263
W.E. Raney - 1,170
Frank Moses - 691
Arthur Bollard - 615
John Damp -508
Richard Reynolds - 270
Fourth Ward
Wm. Burns (incumbent) - 2,226
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,161
James Crane (incumbent) - 1,888
Edward Hanlan - 1,595
H.E. Trent - 1,300
Thomas Urquhart - 1,264
William Carlyle (incumbent) - 1,093
James Jolliffe - 838
W.G McWilliams -835
Robert P. Hall - 323
George McKibbon - 279
Fifth Ward
Francis H. Woods (incumbent) - 1,903
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,885
Robt. H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,506
A.R. Denison - 1,425
Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh - 1,350
J.E. Verral - 980
Robert Hay - 694
W.W. Farley - 450
George Evans - 188
C.A. Muerrle - 171
Sixth Ward
James M. Bowman - 1,057
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 1,029
Adam Lynd M.D. (incumbent) - 761
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 731
J. Harvey Hall - 709
Hugh MacMath - 644
Sturgeon Stewart - 609
Alex Asher - 599
Joseph Pocock - 406
C.F. Denison - 337
John Brown - 309
George Gilbert Rowe - 252
Robert Buist Noble - 194
George Gordon Miles - 18
Source: and
References
1898 elections in Canada
Municipal elections in Toronto
1898 in Ontario |
892832 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1899%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1899 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Canada, on January 2, 1899. Mayor John Shaw was elected for his third term in office in a row, defeating opponent Ernest A. Macdonald and Third Ward Alderman George McMurrich. It was Macdonald's third unsuccessful attempt to be elected mayor, and McMurrich's second. Macdonald would succeed in his fourth attempt, at the 1900 Toronto municipal election.
Toronto mayor
Results
John Shaw (incumbent) - 11,175
Ernest A. Macdonald - 10,465
Alderman George McMurrich - 3,745
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was elected by Toronto City Council from among its members, and presided over by the mayor. At the first council meeting following the general election, council chose Aldermen Burns, Lynd, and Woods to sit on the body.
Plebiscites
Three by-laws authorizing expenditures were approved by plebiscite: $62,500 for the erection of the Queen Street Viaduct spanning the Don River; $150,00 for the remodelling of St. Lawrence Market, and $40,000 for waterfront improvements at the foot of Bay Street.
Don River Bridge
Yea - 3,605
Nay - 2,740
St. Lawrence Market
Yea - 4,524
Nay - 2,188
Waterfront
Yea - 3,723
Nay - 2,459
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards.
Only two aldermen seeking re-election were defeated, both in the First Ward: John Leslie, who had also sat on the city's powerful Toronto Board of Control (which at this time was still chosen by city council rather than elected), and Alderman Richardson who were replaced by former alderman Stewart and John Russell. In the Second Ward, former alderman Francis Stephens Spence filled the vacancy left by the retirement of Alderman Bryce. In the Third Ward, former alderman N.L. Steiner filled the vacancy left by Alderman McMurrich's mayoral candidacy.
First Ward
James Frame (incumbent) - 1,589
John Russell - 1,109
H.R. Frankland (incumbent) - 1,091
Wm. T. Stewart - 1,091
John Knox Leslie (incumbent) - 1,058
F.A. Richardson (incumbent)- 1,013
Thomas Allen - 868
E.M. Corker - 281
C.C. Woodley - 121
Dr. Spiers - 80
Second Ward
John Hallam (incumbent) - 2,052
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,949
Francis S. Spence - 1,923
Thos. Davies (incumbent) - 1,761
E. Strachan Cox - 1,684
Thomas Foster - 1,349
Garrett F. Frankland - 876
W.L. Beale - 740
William Thompson - 151
James O'Hara - 126
Third Ward
O.B. Sheppard (incumbent) - 3,225
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,886
Richard John Score (incumbent) - 2,503
N.L. Steiner - 1,795
James Allison - 1,557
W.E. Raney - 1,515
George Boxall - 917
Arthur Bollard - 615
A. Hepburn - 187
Fourth Ward
Wm. Burns (incumbent) - 2,870
James Crane (incumbent) - 2,818
Edward Hanlan (incumbent) - 2,373
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,318
Thomas Urquhart - 2,288
S.W. Burns - 2,057
H.W. Paull - 1,016
Thomas Roberts - 238
Fifth Ward
A.R. Denison (incumbent) - 2,281
Francis H. Woods (incumbent) - 2,145
John Dunn (incumbent) - 2,116
Robt. H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,888
Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh - 1,814
H.E. Hamilton - 1,092
Alex Stewart - 783
J.B. Banks - 277
C.A. Muerie - 197
John Ward - 190
F.J. Sabine - 99
Edward Schilling - 42
Sixth Ward
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 1,499
James Gowanlock (incumbent) - 1,492
James M. Bowman (incumbent) - 1,328
Adam Lynd M.D. (incumbent) - 1,289
Alex Asher - 1,026
J.J. Ward - 672
Hugh MacMath - 635
Thomas Hurst - 440
William Dean - 220
Robert Buist Noble - 114
J.H. Hall - 70
John Fawcett - 67
J.C. McLean - 49
H.M. Mulholland - 43
Source:
References
1899 elections in Canada
1899
1899 in Ontario |
892833 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1900%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1900 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 1, 1900. Incumbent Mayor of Toronto John Shaw chose not to stand for a third term. Former Alderman Ernest A. Macdonald was elected mayor after having been unsuccessful on three previous attempts. He defeated Member of Parliament Edward Frederick Clarke, who was also a former mayor, and Second Ward Alderman John Hallam.
Toronto mayor
Results
Ernest A. Macdonald - 11,912
Edward Frederick Clarke, M.P. - 9,229
Alderman John Hallam - 5,181
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was elected by Toronto City Council from among its members. Aldermen Sheppard, Frame and Spence were chosen to sit on the board, which was chaired by the mayor.
Plebiscites
Two plebiscites were held, one on the amalgamation of the school boards for elementary schools and high schools and a second authorizing the payment of salaries to the Mayor, Controllers, and Alderman, positions which had been unpaid.
Amalgamation of school boards
For - 11,288
Against - 5,650
Salaries for the Mayor, Controllers, and Aldermen
For - 7,584
Against - 11,220
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Four alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards. Former Alderman John Leslie filled the vacancy left by the retirement of Alderman Frankland in the First Ward. Aldermen Davies, Score, Hanlan, Graham, and Lynd were all defeated.
First Ward
James Frame (incumbent) - 1,911
Wm. T. Stewart (incumbent) - 1,394
John Knox Leslie - 1,263
John Russell (incumbent)- 1,125
F.A. Richardson - 1,022
Lewis Brown - 782
George Chesman - 232
Charles C. Woodley - 194
E. Rice - 113
Second Ward
Francis Stephen Spence (incumbent) - 2,150
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 2,051
Edward Strachan Cox - 1,684
Thomas Foster - 1,581 (after recount)
George Anderson - 1,576 (after recount)
Charles Caldwell - 1,351
Thomas Davies (incumbent) - 1,286
William Thompson - 333
The original count was reported as Anderson 1,571 and Foster 1,524. A recount found that Foster had 11 more votes than Anderson. As a result Foster was seated as the ward's fourth alderman.
Third Ward
John Francis Loudon - 3,628
Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,681
George McMurrich - 2,351
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 2,139
Richard John Score (incumbent) - 2,003
Herbert S. James - 458
Fourth Ward
Thomas Urquhart - 3,098
Wm. P. Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,674
James Crane (incumbent) - 2,601
Wm. Burns (incumbent) - 2,495
Stephen W. Burns - 2,476
Edward Hanlan (incumbent) - 1,345
Thomas Roberts - 384
Reports initially gave William Burns 2,497 votes and Stephen Burns 2,470 votes. A recount adjusted the figures but affirmed the election of William Burns.
Fifth Ward
William L. Bell - 2,173
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,831
A.R. Denison (incumbent) - 1,703
Francis H. Woods (incumbent) - 1,611
Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh - 1,600
Robert H. Graham (incumbent) - 1,559
Alex Stewart - 1,117
Henry E. Hamilton - 848
D.T. Hedley - 95
John Sabine - 90
Sixth Ward
Alex Asher - 1,701
John J. Graham (incumbent) - 1,636
James M. Bowman (incumbent) - 1,615
John J. Ward - 1,419
James W. Mallon - 1,370
Dr Adam Lynd (incumbent) - 1,191
Hugh MacMath - 707
A.F. Hatch - 83
Source: and
References
1900 elections in Canada
1900
1900 in Ontario |
892834 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1908%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1908 Toronto municipal election | In the 1908 Toronto municipal election, held January 1, 1908, former alderman Joseph Oliver was elected Mayor of Toronto in an open contest after incumbent Emerson Coatsworth decided not to seek a third term. Oliver defeated former alderman and and future mayor George Reginald Geary (also a future Conservative Member of Parliament), former Conservative Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario Dr. Beattie Nesbitt, socialist and future mayor James Simpson and former school trustee and hardware merchant Miles Vokes, in the election. Oliver's majority of almost 7,000 votes was the largest ever recorded up to that time in a Toronto mayoral election.
A referendum was also held which approved the creation of a publicly-owned utility, the Toronto Hydro-Electric corporation, to replace a series of privately-owned power companies, and to also put into public ownership two private interurban radial streetcar companies, the Toronto Suburban Railway and the Toronto Eastern Railway (despite this, the streetcar companies remained privately owned).
Mayoral election
Results
Joseph Oliver - 14,003
George Reginald Geary - 7,162
Beattie Nesbitt - 6,523
James Simpson- 3,691
Miles Vokes - 979
Reference:
Board of Control
Four members were elected to the Toronto Board of Control in an at-large vote. Long-time Toronto Controller William Peyton Hubbard, the first and for decades only Black Canadian to sit on Toronto City Council, lost his seat to Frank S. Spence.
Results
Horatio Clarence Hocken (inc.) - 15,786
Frank S. Spence - 10,315
William Spence Harrison (inc.) - 9,784
J.J. Ward (inc.) - 9,672
William Peyton Hubbard (inc.) - 8,679
John Shaw - 6,122
Robert Fleming - 5,488
Oliver B. Sheppard- 4,884
John Dunn - 4,136
John Enoch Thompson - 1,259
James Lindala - 1,236
Hugh MacMath - 993
Robert Buist Noble - 709
James O'Hara - 359
Joel Marvin Briggs - 216
Reference:
Plebiscite
Votes were held in towns and cities across Ontario on a plan to create municipally-owned hydro-electric companies to buy electricity produced at Niagara Falls by the publicly-owned Ontario Power Company Generating Station. The by-law also authorized the creation of a "hydro-radial" streetcar system with streetcars travelling between towns and cities.
Power by-law
For - 15,468
Against - 4,548
Reference:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Three alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards.
First Ward
Daniel Chisholm (inc.) - 2,079
William Temple Stewart - 1,435
William J. Saunderson - 1,362
Edward Hales (inc.) - 1,291
Zephaniah Hilton - 998
William Worrell - 991
John Coatsworth Graham - 481
Charles Fletcher Leidy - 360
Elgin Schoff - 158
Second Ward
Tommy Church (inc.) - 2,656
Thomas Foster (inc.) - 2,253
James Hales (inc.) - 1,921
William Norton Eastwood - 1,293
Ewart Farquahar - 864
William Alexander Douglass - 721
John Clark - 445
Josiah Rogers - 199
Third Ward
John Wilson Bengough(inc.) - 2,583
Sam McBride (inc.) - 2,155
Mark Bredin - 2,136
Wesley Sandfield Johnston - 998
Frank W. Johnston - 907
William Earngey - 777
John Kirk - 772
Julius H. Humphrey - 749
Frederick Hogg - 707
David Lorsch - 663
James Phinnemore - 255
Fourth Ward
Robert Crawford Vaughan (inc.) - 3,492
George McMurrich (inc.) - 3,409
Thomas Alexander Lytle (inc.) - 3,240
George Eakins Gibbard - 2,299
Fifth Ward
Albert James Keeler (inc.) - 2,376
Robert Henry Graham (inc.) - 2,339
Peter Whytock (inc.) - 1,155
James Cooper Claxton - 1,221
Joseph May - 1,044
John Aldridge - 1,008
William Carlyle - 887
Alexander Stewart - 875
Thomas Gillies - 692
Frederick W. Jenkins - 554
William James King - 358
Sixth Ward
James Henry McGhie (inc.) - 2,574
John James Graham (inc.) - 2,037
John Henry Adams (inc.) - 1,368
James Arthur McCausland - 1,352
Fred McBrien - 1,036
Walter Mann - 849
Thomas Hurst - 797
John Edward Jarrott - 629
David Ruddick Bell - 603
Thomas Yates Egan - 551
George Fairles - 428
Walter Warrington - 267
Phillips Thompson - 267
Reference:
References
1908 elections in Canada19081908 in Ontario |
892835 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1906%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1906 Toronto municipal election | In the 1906 Toronto municipal election, held January 1, 1906, Alderman Emerson Coatsworth ran against Controller Frank S. Spence for mayor of Toronto. The position of mayor was open as incumbent Thomas Urquhart declined to run for re-election.
The main issue of the campaign was liquor licensing as Spence, a leading prohibitionist, advocated the curtailing of licensed establishments in the city. Coatsworth defeated Spence by 4,000 votes. Proposals to reduce the number of liquor licenses for taverns and liquor stores were both defeated.
Mayoral election
Results
Emerson Coatsworth - 16,371
Frank S. Spence - 12,328
Source:
Board of Control
Four members were elected to the Toronto Board of Control in an at-large vote. Three outgoing members were re-elected while Alfred Jones was elected to fill the vacancy caused by Controller Spence's decision to seek the mayoralty:
Results
William Peyton Hubbard (inc.) - 14,981
S. Alfred Jones - 14,981
J.J. Ward (inc.) - 13,779
John Shaw (inc.) - 12,524
Thomas Hastings - 11,019
Source:
Plebiscite
A referendum was held on a proposed by-law to reduce the number of liquor licenses in the city for both taverns and shops. The proposals were defeated:
Tavern license reduction
Yes - 13,039
No - 14,726
Liquor store license reduction
Yes - 12,849:No - 14,839
Source:
Aldermen elected to City Council
Three alderman were elected to sit on Toronto City Council in each of six wards.
First Ward
Daniel Chisholm (inc.) - 1,976
Robert Fleming (inc.) - 1,665
William Temple Stewart (inc.) - 1,474
Edward Hales - 1,280
James Wilson - 1,221
J.M. Briggs - 180
Second Ward
Joseph Oliver (inc.) - 1,715
Dr. John Noble (inc.) - 1,660
Tommy Church (inc.) - 1,590
Edward Strachan Cox - 1,507
James Hales - 1,358
David Carlyle - 1,137
Thomas Foster - 997
W.S. Johnston - 787
W.A. Douglass - 366
Frederick Burrows - 179
Third Ward
George Reginald Geary (inc.) - 3,100
Oliver Barton Sheppard (inc.) - 2,603
Sam McBride (inc.) - 2,544
John Wilson Bengough - 2,375
Frank Moses - 1,122
J.A. Humphrey - 1,118
John Dunlop - 204
Fourth Ward
Dr. D.W.S. Harrison (inc.) - 3,091
Robert Crawford Vaughan (inc.) - 3,009
George McMurrich - 2,385
Fred Dane - 2,170
E.J. Humphrey - 1,414
Edward Hanlan - 1,310
Fifth Ward
John Dunn (inc.) - 2,849
John Bell Hay (inc.) - 2,263
Albert James Keeler (inc.) - 2,237
Frank Woods - 2,055
James Cooper Claxton- 2,055
Sixth Ward
James Henry McGhie (inc.) - 2,417
John James Graham (inc.) - 2,071
John Henry Adams - 1,567
J. Harvey Hall - 1,065:Walter Mann - 742
D.R. Bell - 642
J.E. Stewart - 607
W.H. Warrington - 436
Thomas Cannon - 389
Robert Buist Noble - 191
Source:
References
1906 elections in Canada
1906
1906 in Ontario |
892836 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1907%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1907 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 1, 1907. Incumbent Mayor of Toronto Emerson Coatsworth was re-elected to a second one-year term, defeating Socialist Party of Canada candidate James Lindala and Robert Buist Noble, who was also a socialist. Lindala's strong showing and the mayor's reduced vote total was seen as a repudiation of Coatsworth with The Globe newspaper declaring on its front page "that an unknown Socialist tailor of foreign birth should poll over eight thousand votes for the Mayoralty of Toronto against a barrister of irreproachable personal character, who at one time represented his native city in Parliament... proves how utterly repugnant has been the jellyfish administration of the past year." Coatsworth did not run for a third term the following year.
Toronto mayor
Results
Emerson Coatsworth - 13,698
James Lindala - 8,286
Robert Buist Noble - 1,330
Source:
Board of Control
Two incumbent members of the Toronto Board of Control were re-elected, while Controllers S. Alfred Jones and John Shaw were defeated. William Spence Harrison and Horatio Clarence Hocken joined the Board.
John J. Ward (incumbent) - 9,362
William Spence Harrison - 9,054
Horatio Clarence Hocken - 8,639
William Peyton Hubbard (incumbent) - 8,483
Robert Fleming - 7,077
S. Alfred Jones (incumbent) - 6,710
John Shaw (incumbent) - 6,465
John Dunn - 5,038
Thomas Davies - 1,390
Joel Marvin Briggs - 496
Source: and
Plebiscites
Four plebiscites were held. Proposals for $3 million to be spent on a trunk sewer, $110,000 to build a bridge over Yonge Street to accommodate streetcars and $125,000 for a new entrance to the Exhibition grounds were defeated. A proposal was approved to allow the city to enter into negotiations to purchase electricity from the new public Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario rather than private electricity companies, despite the criticisms of the mayor and the opposition of private electric companies.
Power by-law
For -10,696
Against -2,905
Exhibition by-law
For - 4,015
Against - 8,841
Trunk sewer by-law
For - 5,427
Against - 7,515
Yonge Street Bridge by-law
For - 4,354
Against - 7,812
Source:
City council
Three aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward.
First Ward (Riverdale)
Daniel Chisholm (incumbent) - 1,758
Edward Hales - 1,402
James Wilson - 1,282
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,142
William John Saunderson - 1,107
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Thomas Foster - 1,719
James Hales - 1,402
Tommy Church (incumbent) - 1,653
Dr. John Noble (incumbent) - 1,172
Edward Strachan Cox - 1,065
Frederick Hogg - 816
Patrick O'Connor - 725
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)
George Reginald Geary (incumbent) - 2,608
John Wilson Bengough - 2,389
Sam McBride (incumbent) - 1,058
J.A. Humphrey - 936
Francis William Johnston - 883
John Harris - 755
John Solomon Granatstein - 409
Abraham Friedman - 135
Fourth Ward (Spadina)
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,507
Robert Crawford Vaughan (incumbent) - 2,501
Thomas Alexander Lytle - 1,862
Harry Lovelock - 1516
Alexander R. Williamson - 1,062
Dr. Charles E. Stacey - 940
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)
Albert James Keeler (incumbent) - 1,953
Robert Henry Graham - 1,559
Peter Whytock - 1,479
John Aldridge - 1,173
William Carlyle - 1,063
Blayney Harvey Scott- 969
William J. Bell - 645
Henry Egbert Hurd - 622
John Albert Couch - 500
Henry T. Meredith - 463
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)
James Henry McGhie (incumbent) - 2,654
John James Graham (incumbent) - 2,176
John Henry Adams (incumbent) - 1,850
Thomas Hurst - 1,415
Source: and
References
1907 elections in Canada
1907
1907 in Ontario |
892837 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1905%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1905 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 2, 1905. Thomas Urquhart was elected to his third term, defeating merchant George Gooderham and barrister William David McPherson.
Toronto mayor
Results
Thomas Urquhart - 15,173
George Gooderham - 12,827
William David McPherson - 1,136
Source:
Board of Control
Incumbents Frank S. Spence, William Peyton Hubbard, and John Shaw were re-elected to the Toronto Board of Control and were joined by Alderman J. J. Ward, who filled the vacancy created by Controller Louden's retirement. Controller Shaw first joined the board several months later by winning a by-election following the resignation of Controller Fred H. Richardson, who had resigned following allegations that he had received bribes from the Toronto Railway Company.
Results
Frank S. Spence (incumbent) - 13,032
Alderman John Joseph Ward - 12,993
William Peyton Hubbard (incumbent) - 12,880
John Shaw (incumbent) - 12,436
James Russell Lovett Starr - 9,823
Joseph Oliver - 8,141
Alderman Thomas Foster - 6,395
Alderman Joseph George Ramsden - 5,839
Frank Moses - 5,048
Arthur Richard Denison - 4,925
Edward Hanlan - 2,178
Source: and
Plebiscites
Two by-laws authorizing public works expenditures were approved by plebiscite: a by-law to spend $300,000 on new buildings on the Toronto Industrial Exhibition grounds, $700,000 to improve the city's fire protection system in the wake of the 1904 Great Fire of Toronto. A third vote on a $700 tax exemption for all dwellings was also approved.
Exhibition
Yes - 6,151
No - 4,307
Fire protection
Yes - 8,325
No - 3,239
Tax exemption
Yes - 15,454
No - 8,127
Source:
City council
Three aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward.
First Ward (Riverdale)
Daniel Chisholm (incumbent) - 2,000
Robert Fleming (incumbent) - 1,924
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,692
James Wilson - 1,304
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Emerson Coatsworth(incumbent) - 2,601
Dr. John Noble (incumbent) - 2,128
Tommy Church - 1,891
David Carlyle - 1,722
Wesley S. Johnston - 1,289
Edward Strachan Cox - 910
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)
Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,535
George Reginald Geary (incumbent) - 2,466
Sam McBride - 2,215
Henry Sheard - 2,204
Julius Alexander Humphrey - 837
Thomas Edward Rawson - 788
William Carlyle Hall - 505
John Dunlop - 259
Fourth Ward (Spadina)
Dr. William S. Harrison (incumbent) - 3,127
Robert Crawford Vaughan - 2,931
Stephen Alfred Jones (incumbent) - 2,427
Stephen W. Burns - 1,987
Richard Donald - 1,898
Arthur Hillyard Birmingham - 733
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)
John Bell Hay (incumbent) - 2,389
John Dunn (incumbent) - 2,314
Albert James Keeler - 2,155
Frank Woods (incumbent) - 1,938
Peter Whytock - 1,567
M. Joseph Mallancy - 427
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)
James Henry McGhie (incumbent) - 2,024
John James Graham (incumbent) - 1,888
Dr. Adam Lynd - 1,635
John Milton Godfrey - 1,608
William James Clark - 702
Sam Scott - 655
James Edward Stewart - 416
George Gordon Miles - 362
Robert Buist Noble - 148
Source: and
References
1905
1905 |
892838 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1904%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1904 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 1, 1904. Thomas Urquhart was acclaimed to a second term. 1904 was the first time the Toronto Board of Control, the executive committee of Toronto, was directly elected, after the Ontario legislature passed a law requiring municipal boards of control to be chosen through direct election by the municipality's voters. Previously, Toronto City Council chose four alderman to sit on the body, which would be chaired by the mayor.
Toronto mayor
Results
Thomas Urquhart - acclaimed
Source:
Board of Control
Four members of the Toronto Board of Control were directly elected for the first time. Previously, Controllers were four alderman chosen by city council, with Aldermen Loudon, Oliver, Burns and Richardson being appointed to the outgoing Board of Control. Seven of the eight candidates were sitting aldermen: First Ward Alderman Richardson, Second Ward Aldermen Spence and Oliver, Third Ward Alderman Loudon, Fourth Ward Aldermen Burns and Hubbard, Fifth Ward Alderman Starr. The eight candidate, John Shaw, was a former mayor. Several months after the election, Controller Richardson resigned after his election agent was charged with accepting bribes from the Toronto Railway Company, a private streetcar company. Shaw was then elected to the Board of Control in a by-election.
William Peyton Hubbard, whose parents were slaves who had fled to Toronto through the Underground Railroad, was the first person of colour to be elected to Toronto City Council and was one of the first Black people to be elected to any office in Canada. As of 2020, he is the only person of colour to be elected to city-wide office in Toronto.
Results
Frank S. Spence - 12,294
John F. Loudon - 11,121
William Peyton Hubbard - 8,950
Fred H. Richardson - 8,923
William Burns - 8,641
James Russell Lovett Starr - 8,639
Joseph Oliver - 8,598
John Shaw - 7,184
Source:
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on a by-law granting $50,000 towards the creation of a sanatorium for the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis.
Sanatorium by-law
For - 4,131
Against - 3,681
Source:
City council
Three aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward. This was reduced from four aldermen per ward, previously.
First Ward (Riverdale)
Daniel Chisholm (incumbent) - 1,347
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,211
Robert Fleming (incumbent) - 1,163
James Wilson - 749
John Preston - 530
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Emerson Coatsworth - 1,845
Dr. John Noble (incumbent) - 1,362
Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 1,358
David Carlyle - 1,136
Edward Strachan Cox - 984
John W. Mogan - 800
W.A. Douglass - 707
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)
Joseph George Ramsden (incumbent) - 2,191
Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,098
George Reginald Geary - 1,716
George McMurrich - 1,604
Arthur Callow - 432
Fourth Ward (Spadina)
James Crane - 1,857
Stephen Alfred Jones - 1,850
Dr. William S. Harrison (incumbent) - 1,829
Stephen Wellesley Burns - 1,549
Robert Crawford Vaughan - 1,535
Edward James Hearn - 802
Albert Edward Hacker - 546
Charles Hambly - 230
Edmund Schilling - 105
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)
Frank Woods (incumbent) - 2,039
William Bell (incumbent) - 1,576
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,511
John Bell Hay - 1,246
Alexander Stewart - 1,067
Peter Whytock - 1,003
Wellington O. McTaggart - 510
David Clark - 244
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)
Jonn Joseph Ward (incumbent) - 1,581
James Henry McGhie (incumbent) - 1,446
John James Graham (incumbent) - 1,340
Dr. Adam Lynd (incumbent) - 1,219
Samuel Scott - 752
Source: and
References
1904 elections in Canada
1904
1904 in Ontario |
892839 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1903%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1903 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 5, 1903. In the mayoral election, Alderman Thomas Urquhart defeated incumbent Mayor Oliver Aiken Howland, who was attempting to win a third term in office. Urquhart's platform included operating the telephone and gas systems under city management. Urquhart had the support of the Toronto Trades and Labour Council. Alderman Lamb came in third.
Toronto mayor
Results
Alderman Thomas Urquhart - 8,634
Oliver Aiken Howland (incumbent) - 7,887
Alderman Daniel Lamb - 6,473
Christopher C. Robinson - 914
Charles Christopher Woodley - 428
Source: and
Board of Control
1903 was the last year in which the Toronto Board of Control, the executive body of Toronto City Council was not directly elected. At the first council meeting following the general election, council chose Aldermen Loudon, Oliver, Burns and Richardson to sit on the body, which was chaired by the Mayor.
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on a by-law to authorize expenditure on a modern pumping engine for the city's waterworks
Waterworks by-law
For - 5,615
Against - 2,730
Source:
City council
Four aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward. Former mayor John Shaw attempted to win an aldermanic seat in the Third Ward, but was defeated.
First Ward (Riverdale)
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,518
Daniel Chisholm - 1,515
Robert Fleming (incumbent) - 1,407
Fred H. Richardson (incumbent) - 1,255
John Preston - 1,100
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Frank S. Spence (incumbent) - 1,932
Joseph Oliver (incumbent) - 1,883Dr. John Noble - 1,781Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 1,583
Edward Strachan Cox - 1,426
David Carlyle - 1,136
Thomas Davies - 624
W.A. Douglass - 594
Frederick Hogg - 585
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)John F. Loudon (incumbent) - 2,814Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,788Joseph George Ramsden- 2,356Samuel George Curry (incumbent) - 2,154
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,035
John Shaw - 1,968
John Patterson - 196
Fourth Ward (Spadina)William Burns (incumbent) -2,770William Peyton Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,585Dr. William S. Harrison - 2,582Stephen Wellesley Burns - 2,469
Alex R. Williamson - 1,731
Lieut-Col. Norman F. Paterson - 1,535
Edmund Schilling - 258
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)James Russell Lovett Starr - 2,508John Dunn (incumbent) - 2,435William Bell (incumbent) - 1,958Frank Woods (incumbent) - 1,864
Peter Whytock - 1,594
Alexander Stewart (incumbent) - 1,353
M.J. Mallaney - 391
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)James Henry McGhie - 1,999Jonn Joseph Ward (incumbent) - 1,736John James Graham (incumbent) - 1,696Dr. Adam Lynd''' (incumbent) - 1,359
J.H. Hall (incumbent) - 1,238
Source: and
References
1903 elections in Canada
1903
1903 in Ontario |
892840 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1902%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1902 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 6, 1902. In the mayoral election, Mayor Oliver Aiken Howland won a second term in office defeating William Findlay Maclean, a sitting Member of Parliament and founder of The Toronto World newspaper, who campaigned on a platform of public ownership, regulation and control over utilities such as waterworks, gasworks, electricity, and telephone, and the privately owned Toronto Railway Company (which operated the cities streetcar routes), as well as promising nighttime and Sunday streetcar service, and against temperance measures. Maclean's intention of simultaneously holding both the mayoralty and a seat in the Canadian House of Commons was a factor in his defeat. Another issue that hurt Maclean was his support for softening Toronto's blue law to allow for Sunday streetcar service. The third candidates was Charles Woodley who was the standard-bearer of the Socialist Labor Party.
Toronto mayor
Results
Oliver Aiken Howland (incumbent) - 13,424
William Findlay Maclean, M.P. - 8,774
Charles Christopher Woodley - 633
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was, in 1902, elected by Toronto City Council from among its members. At the first council meeting following the general election, council chose Aldermen Graham, Crane, Loudon and McMurrich to sit on the body, which was chaired by the Mayor.
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on a by-law to authorize expenditure on new buildings on the Exhibition grounds.
Exhibition buildings
For - 5,097
Against - 3,342
Source:
City council
Four aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward. Former mayor John Shaw attempted to win an aldermanic seat in the Third Ward, but was defeated.
First Ward (Riverdale)
James Frame (incumbent) - 1,684
Robert Fleming - 1,614
Fred H. Richardson (incumbent) - 1,301
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,203
John Preston - 1,126
Dr. Hugh Spears - 326
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Frank S. Spence - 2,318
Joseph Oliver (incumbent) - 2,050
Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 1,825
Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,626
Edward Strachan Cox (incumbent) - 1,525
John Akers - 1,081
John Henderson - 615
W.A. Douglass - 405
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)
Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,578
Samuel George Curry - 2,551
George McMurrich (incumbent) - 2,526
John Francis Loudon (incumbent) - 2,233
Henry Sheard (incumbent) - 2,070
Joseph George Ramsden - 1,832
Fourth Ward (Spadina)
Thomas Urquhart - 3,280
William Burns (incumbent) -2,803
James Crane (incumbent) - 2,709
William Peyton Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,496
Alex R. Williamson - 1,830
Edmund Schilling - 254
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)
William Bell (incumbent) - 2,017
John Dunn - 1,914
Frank Woods (incumbent) - 1,892
Alexander Stewart - 1,632
James Russell Lovett Starr (incumbent) - 1,581
Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh (incumbent) - 1,332
H.E. Hamilton - 769
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)
John Joseph Ward (incumbent) - 1,604
John James Graham (incumbent) - 1,551
Dr. Adam Lynd (incumbent) - 1,319
J.Harvey Hall - 1,178
James Henry McGhie - 989
W.W. Hodgson (incumbent) - 929
William O'Neill - 245
R.H. Holmes - 216
Robert Buist Noble - 210
Source: and
References
1902 elections in Canada
1902
1902 in Ontario |
892841 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/1901%20Toronto%20municipal%20election | 1901 Toronto municipal election | Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on January 7, 1901. In the mayoral election, Oliver Aiken Howland was elected, defeating Alderman Frank S. Spence as well as incumbent Mayor Ernest A. Macdonald, who came in third place, and former mayor John Shaw, who came in fourth place. In the council elections, seventeen incumbent alderman were returned and five were defeated.
Shortly after the election, Mayor Howland called off plans by the city to put into public ownership the privately owned municipal gasworks company, despite the plan having been approved in the plebiscite by a large majority.
Toronto mayor
Results
Oliver Aiken Howland - 12,300
Alderman Frank S. Spence - 8,076
Ernest A. Macdonald (incumbent) - 3,354
John Shaw - 990
Charles Christopher Woodley - 224
Source:
Board of Control
The Toronto Board of Control was elected by Toronto City Council from among its members. The number of Controllers was increased from thee to four, in addition to the Mayor who chairs the Board. At the first council meeting following the general election, four Conservatives were chosen. Aldermen Sheppard, Frame and Lamb were chosen on the first ballot and Aldermen Hubbard was chosen on the second, beating out Alderman Graham.
Plebiscites
A plebiscite was held on putting the municipal gas plant into public ownership and operation. Despite the plebiscite passing, the new Howland administration cancelled the project.
Gasworks
For - 13,398
Against - 6,488
Source:
City council
Four aldermen were elected to Toronto City Council per ward.
First Ward (Riverdale)
James Frame (incumbent) - 1,870
John Russell (incumbent) - 1,352
William Temple Stewart (incumbent) - 1,321
Fred H. Richardson - 1,207
John Preston - 1,077
Second Ward (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
Thomas Foster (incumbent) - 2,947
Joseph Oliver - 2,432Edward Strachan Cox (incumbent) - 1,824Daniel Lamb (incumbent) - 1,742
John Akers - 1,360
Thomas W. Barber - 1,329
Third Ward (Central Business District and The Ward)Oliver Barton Sheppard (incumbent) - 2,561 John Francis Loudon (incumbent) - 2,314 Henry Sheard - 1,922 George McMurrich (incumbent) - 1,878
Bernard Saunders (incumbent) - 1,620
John Morrison - 1,585
Joseph George Ramsden - 1,499
Samuel George Curry - 993
Thomas Hunter - 733
Robert L. Fraser - 720
Thomas W. Curtis - 286
Robert Barton - 101
James B. Tremaine - 100
Fourth Ward (Spadina)Thomas Urquhart - 3,191William Burns (incumbent) - 2,680William Peyton Hubbard (incumbent) - 2,673 James Crane (incumbent) - 2,500
Alex R. Williamson - 1,688
Samuel Platt - 740
Fifth Ward (Trinity-Bellwoods)James Russell Lovett Starr - 1,887 Dr. William Stewart Fraleigh - 1,748 William Bell (incumbent) - 1,593 Frank Woods (incumbent) - 1,571
Alexander Stewart - 1,503
A.R. Denison (incumbent) - 1,418
John Dunn (incumbent) - 1,340
David Clark - 594
J.J. Dunbar - 447
Edmund Schilling - 81
Sixth Ward (Brockton and Parkdale)John James Graham (incumbent) - 1,758John Joseph Ward (incumbent) - 1,562 W.W. Hodgson (incumbent) - 1,523 Dr. Adam Lynd''' - 1,367
J.M. Bowman - 1,318
Alexander Asher (incumbent) - 1,171
William O'Neill - 359
Source: and
References
1901 elections in Canada
1901
1901 in Ontario |
892847 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam%20Jones%20%28basketball%2C%20born%201933%29 | Sam Jones (basketball, born 1933) | Samuel Jones (June 24, 1933 – December 30, 2021) was an American professional basketball player and shooting guard. Jones won the second most NBA championships of any player (10). He played for the Boston Celtics between 1957 until 1969. Jones was an assistant coach for the New Orleans Jazz between 1974 until 1975. Jones was born in Wilmington, North Carolina.
Jones died on December 30, 2021 at the age of 88.
References
1933 births
2021 deaths
Boston Celtics players
Sportspeople from North Carolina
People from Wilmington, North Carolina |
892849 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andreas%20Behm | Andreas Behm | Andreas Behm (28 November 1962 – 27 December 2021) was a German weightlifter. She won a bronze medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain.
Behm died on 27 December 2021 in Stralsund, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany at the age of 59.
References
1962 births
2021 deaths
German Olympic bronze medalists |
892851 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavrin | Wavrin | Wavrin () is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018, 7,723 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892852 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigel%20Starmer-Smith | Nigel Starmer-Smith | Nigel Starmer-Smith (born 25 December 1944) is a British former international rugby union player, rugby journalist and commentator. He was born in Cheltenham, England. Starmer-Smith played for the England national rugby union team between 1969 until 1971.
In 2015, Starmer-Smith was diagnosed with dementia.
References
1944 births
Living people
British rugby league players
British journalists
Sports commentators
Sportspeople from Gloucestershire |
892853 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/James%20Whale%20%28radio%20presenter%29 | James Whale (radio presenter) | Michael James Whale (born 13 May 1951) is an English radio personality, television presenter, podcast host and author. He became popular in the 1980s when he hosted The James Whale Radio Show on Radio Aire in Leeds. From 1995 to 2008, Whale hosted a night time radio show on talkSPORT (Talk Radio 1995–2000).
In February 2000, Whale was diagnosed with kidney cancer. In August 2020, he said that his cancer had spread to his spine, brain and lungs.
References
1951 births
Living people
People with cancer
English radio personalities
English television presenters
Podcasters
Writers from Surrey |
892854 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank%20Pritchard | Frank Pritchard | Frank Semu Pritchard (born 3 November 1983) is an Australian-born former professional rugby league player. He played as a second-row forward. He was a New Zealand and Samoan international. He played in the National Rugby League (NRL) for the Penrith Panthers, Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and Parramatta Eels. He also played for English Super League side Hull F.C. in 2016.
Pritchard was born in Darlinghurst, Sydney, New South Wales. He is of Samoan and New Zealand background. His brother, Kaysa, played as a hooker for the Parramatta Eels.
References
Other websites
Frank Pritchard at Rugby League Project
1983 births
Living people
Australian rugby league players
New Zealand rugby league players
Samoan people
Sportspeople from Sydney |
892855 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Treacher | Bill Treacher | Bill Treacher (born 4 June 1930) is an English actor. He is best known for playing the role of Arthur Fowler in the BBC One soap opera EastEnders, from 1985 to 1996. Treacher was born in London. His career began in 1960 and he retired in 2012.
In 2015, Treacher was diagnosed with ataxia.
References
Other websites
1930 births
Living people
English movie actors
English television actors
English stage actors
Actors from London |
892856 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joss%20Ackland | Joss Ackland | Sidney Edmond Jocelyn "Joss" Ackland, CBE (29 February 1928 – 6 January, 2022) was an English actor. He appeared in more than 130 movie and television roles. He was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for playing Jock Delves Broughton in White Mischief (1987).
Ackland died at his home in Cromer, Norfolk on 6 January, 2022, at the age of 93. The cause of death was prostate cancer caused by Alzheimer's disease.
References
1928 births
2022 deaths
English movie actors
English television actors
English stage actors
Actors from London
Deaths from Alzheimer's disease
Deaths from prostate cancer |
892861 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot%20in%20Cleveland | Hot in Cleveland | Hot in Cleveland was an American television sitcom on TV Land. It starred Valerie Bertinelli, Jane Leeves, Wendie Malick and Betty White.
The series premiered on June 16, 2010. On May 1, 2014, TV Land renewed Hot in Cleveland for a sixth season and confirmed the following November that it would be the show's last. The series ran for 128 episodes. The last episode came out on June 3, 2015.
The series was created by Suzanne Martin.
References
2010 American television series debuts
2015 American television series endings |
892863 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wormhout | Wormhout | Wormhout (; older version: Wormhoudt; ) is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018, 5,665 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892864 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane%20Leeves | Jane Leeves | Jane Elizabeth Leeves (born 18 April 1961) is an English actress. She played Daphne Moon on the NBC television sitcom Frasier from 1993 until 2004. She is also known for her role as Joy Scroggs on TV Land's sitcom Hot in Cleveland.
References
1961 births
Living people
English movie actors
English television actors
English stage actors
English voice actors
Actors from Essex |
892865 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grown%20Ups%20%28movie%29 | Grown Ups (movie) | Grown Ups is a 2010 American comedy movie directed by Dennis Dugan, written by Adam Sandler and Fred Wolf. It is produced by Jack Giarraputo. Sandler who stars in the movie along with Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade, Rob Schneider, Salma Hayek, Maria Bello, and Maya Rudolph.
References
2010 comedy movies
American comedy movies
Movies directed by Dennis Dugan |
892867 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wambaix | Wambaix | Wambaix is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018, 369 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892868 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasnes-au-Bac | Wasnes-au-Bac | Wasnes-au-Bac is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018, 599 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892869 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavrechain-sous-Denain | Wavrechain-sous-Denain | Wavrechain-sous-Denain is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018, 1,651 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892871 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavrechain-sous-Faulx | Wavrechain-sous-Faulx | Wavrechain-sous-Faulx is a commune in Nord in north France. In 2018 399 people lived there.
Other websites
INSEE commune file
Communes in Nord |
892877 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/SV%20Wals-%20Gr%C3%BCnau | SV Wals- Grünau | SV Wals- Grünau is a football club from Wals-Siezenheim, a community in Salzburg. The club is playing in Regionalliga Salzburg, the 3rd level of Austrian soccer.
History
The club was founded in May 1957. Since 1964 they had a youth department. The first years they played their matches on the Danubia sports ground in Salzburg-Lehen. 2011/12 the club was promoted to the Regionalliga West. After two seasons they were relegated but in the 2016-17 season they were promoted again.
Current squad
Coaches
Fritz Rathgeb (1986–1990)
Hans Haring (Autum1990)
Hans Stimmler (Spring 1991–1992)
Fritz Rathgeb (1992–1994)
Wolfgang Dietinger (Summer 1994–Summer2002)
Harald Fesl (Summer 2002 3 matches)
Hans-Jörg Verwanger (4th round 2002–December 2002)
Tarek Mami (December 2002–14 September 2003)
Hans-Jörg Verwanger (14 September 2003–Winter 2003/2004)
Josef Lechner (Winter 2003/2004–Summer 2005)
Erwin Greil (Summer 2005–Autum 2007)
Toni Schaupper (from spring 2008)
René Pessler (2011–December 2012)
Michael Kalhammer (December 2012–September 2013)
Matthias Zimmerling (September 2013–December 2013)
Helmut Baic (1 January 2014–3 May 2015)
Pascal Ortner (4 May 2015–30. June 2015)
Eduard Glieder (1 July 2015–3 April 2016)
Pascal Ortner (4 April 2016–30 Juni 2016)
Franz Aigner (from 1 July 2016)
League
References
Austrian football clubs
Football clubs of Salzburg |
892880 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah%20%28band%29 | Noah (band) | Noah (used to be Peterpan; stylized as NOAH) is an Indonesian rock musical group that was formed in 2000 in Bandung, Jawa Barat. This musical group is formed as Peterpan by Ariel (vocals), Andika (keyboard), Indra (bass guitar), Lukman (guitar), Reza (drums) and Uki (guitar). Their music is generally alternative rock and pop rock. Most of their songs are written by their singer, Ariel. More than 9 millions of their albums are sold in Indonesia, which makes Noah the most successful alternative rock group in that country. Noah's members are now Ariel, Lukman, and David (keyboard).
Music
Music that Noah played is usually said to be alternative rock and pop rock music. Other than that, Noah also play post-Britpop, electronic rock, pop, and grunge. In 2014, Ariel said that they are confused about what exactly is their genre because they were used to perform "top 40" songs with different genres.
Band members
Current members
Nazril Irham – vocals (2000–present)
Loekman Hakim – guitar (2000–present)
David Kurnia Albert – keyboard (additional member in 2006–2008; full member in 2008–present)
Past members
Andika Naliputra Wirahardja – keyboard (2000–2006)
Hendra Suhendra – bass guitar (2000–2006)
Ilsyah Ryan Reza – drums (2000–2015)
Mohammad Kautsar Hikmat – guitar (2000–2019)
Timeline
Albums
As Peterpan
Taman Langit (2003)
Bintang di Surga (2004)
Hari yang Cerah... (2007)
As Noah
Seperti Seharusnya (2012)
Keterkaitan Keterikatan (2019)
References
Other websites
NOAH OFFICIAL on YouTube
Musical groups established in 2000
2000s music groups
2010s music groups |
892881 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paramount%20Music | Paramount Music | Paramount Music is an American music publishing company owned by Paramount Pictures. The company specialized in movie songs, but published other popular music as well. Songs published by Paramount Music's Fox Music include "God Bless the U.S.A.", "Together Forever" by Rick Astley, "Mr. Brightside" by The Killers and many others.
artists
Paramount music's artists include:
Westlife
Lady Gaga
Kesha
Cascade
Taylor Swift
Rihanna
Europe
a-ha
The Police
Maroon 5
Sia
Ed Sheeran
References
American record labels
2015 establishments in California |
892894 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biostatistics | Biostatistics | Biostatistics (also known as biometry) is the application of statistical methods to biology.
It includes the design of biological experiments, the analysis of data from those experiments and the interpretation of the results.
Research methods
Biology
Statistics |
892895 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/TSV%20St.%20Johann%20im%20Pongau | TSV St. Johann im Pongau | TSV St. Johann is an Austrian football club from St Johann im Pongau, a town in the state of Salzburg. They play in the Regionalliga Salzburg, the third level of Austrian football.
History
The club was founded in 1949 as multi-discipline sports club. One part of the club was football. In 2007 the football team became a independent club. 1970/71 and 1971/72 they played in the Regionalliga West which was then the 2nd level in Austrian football. 2008 they were promoted to Regionalliga West, the third level in Austrian football. The second team is playing in the 2. Landesliga Süd (6th level).
Current team
References
Austrian football clubs
Football clubs of Salzburg |
892900 | https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calisto%20Tanzi | Calisto Tanzi | Calisto Tanzi (17 November 1938 – 1 January 2022) was an Italian convicted businessman. He founded Parmalat in 1961. The company went bankrupt in 2003. In 2008, Tanzi was found to have embezzled about 800 million euros from the company, and went to jail for fraud. In December 2011, Tanzi was sentenced another nine years and two months for the Parmatour bankruptcy. He was born in Collecchio, Italy. He was the owner of Parma Calcio from 1989 until 2003.
Tanzi died on 1 January 2022 in Parma, Italy from a lung infection at the age of 83.
References
1938 births
2022 deaths
Deaths from respiratory tract infection
Italian businesspeople
Fraudsters |
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