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Category:20th-century crimes in Colombia
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Shaheen Merali
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Shaheen Merali (born 1959) is a Tanzanian writer, curator, critic, and artist. Merali began his artistic practice in the 1980s committing to social, political and personal narratives. A regular speaker on ideas of contemporary exhibition making internationally, in 2018 he was the keynote speaker at the International Art Gallery of the Aga Khan Diamond Jubilee Arts Festival, Lisbon.
As an exhibition maker at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Merali curated several exhibitions accompanied by publications which he edited, including The Black Atlantic; Dreams and Trauma - Moving images and the Promised Lands; and Re-Imagining Asia, One Thousand Years of Separation. Merali was the co-curator of the 6th Gwangju Biennale, Korea (2006) and the co-curator of Berlin Heist or the enduring fascination of walled cities for the 4th Mediations Biennale, Poland (2014-2015).
In 1988, Merali co-founded the Panchayat Arts Education Resource Unit in and around Spitafields Market. The Unit's main function was one of collecting ephemera, documents and publications. The Panchayat archival material was donated and is now part of the Tate library's Special Collection in London. His family left India and arrived to Tanganyika in the early 20th century as part of the British colonial campaign to explore to explore its colonial labour policy following its indentured labour policy. The South Asian labour was sent to East Africa to assist the further urbanisation and industrialisation of the East African territories. They implemented Merali's proposal of participation of five Black and Asian artists, living in Britain but coming from a global diaspora, to be included in what was, until then, the dedicated Southern World biennale. Returning from Cuba in 1988, Merali organised the works of the five artists, Sonia Boyce, Allan de Souza, Pitika Ntuli and Keith Piper alongside his own work to be exhibited in the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes in Havana, as well as at the Institute of Education, London. The experience in Havana formalised the working relationship of exhibition making and the possibility of archiving through curating.
Merali's commitment to the community education presented itself with further opportunities: in 1988 he became involved with a group of artists, Bhajan Hunjan, Symrath Patti, Allan de Souza and Shanti Thomas, who initially met at the Slade School of Art to discuss the possibilities of an organisation in a self-funded way.
In 2008, after his contract with HWK ended, Merali was asked to design and facilitate a new gallery in Berlin for the Bodhi Group, which had spaces in Mumbai, Singapore and New York. He has started writing his debut fictional novel in 2019, as well as co-editing for the first volume (of six) in a series contingently titled Artefacts of Solidarity— Critical Pasts, Impending Futures, for London-based MAPT (Merali and Pachkhédé Texts).
== Curatorial practice ==
=== 1989-2003: Independent ===
1989
Distinguishing Marks, Bloomsbury Gallery, Institute of Education, London. With Sonia Boyce, Keith Piper, Allan de Souza, Pitika Ntuli.
Five Black British Artists, Havana Biennale, Cuba. First intervention by Black artists from Europe at the Havana Biennale. Including participation by Sonia Boyce, Keith Piper, Allan de Souza, Pitika Ntuli, a.
1991
Siting Resistance, Embassy Cultural House, London, Ontario, Canada. Initiated by Jamelie Hassan, Ron Banner, with works by Sonia Boyce, Keith Piper, Allan de Souza, Pitika Ntuli.
Group show from South Africa and Artists with (Dis)abilities, One Spirit Gallery, Haringey, London.
One-person show by Chila Kumari Burman, One Spirit Gallery, Haringey, London.
1993
Forensic Fictions, ICA, London. Co-curated performance with Stuart Taylor .
1994
Extreme Unction, HIV/AIDS, RACE/ ETHNICITY, The Garage, Hoxton, East London. Performances and installations by Asian American artists Dan Kwong, Monica Chau, Paul Pfeiffer and Ken Chu / Scottish artist Alistair Maclennan. Screenings by Asian American film-makers at the National Film Theatre including Tran T.Kim Trang.
1995
Samena Rana, Diorama Centre, London. Posthumous exhibition on (dis)ability and photography.
Insurgent Voices, Gallerie 101, Ottawa, Canada. Asian American artists working with HIV/AIDS, RACE/ETHNICITY. Installations by Ming Ma & Ken Chu and video works by Tran T. Kim Trang.
1996
Creative Futures Festival, University of Westminster.
Richard Graville, Commercial Gallery, London.
Clare Robins, Commercial Gallery, London.
Gender and its Multiplicities, Watermans Arts Centre, London. Video screening around masculinity. Featured artists: Ming Ma, ManAct, Michael Petry, Keith Piper, Sarbjit Samra. Co-curated with Jeremy Mulvey.
1997
Videobox, University of Westminster Gallery, London. Video works by Black and Asian artists from Panchayat's archive.
Foreign Vienna, University of Westminster Gallery, London. Photographic record of the changing demographic population of Vienna.
1998
Xenographic Views, Lisl Ponger, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, MA Space, London.
1999
unbound geographies/fused histories, A Space, Toronto; The Lethaby Gallery, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, London . Featuring artists: Simon Tegala, Tanya Syed, Jin-Min Yoon, Enam Huque. Co-curated with Shelly Bahl and Marilyn Jung.
2000
Slow Release, Bishopsgate Goodsyard, London. Site-specific commissions around the notion of the garden. Featuring artists: Edwina Fitzpatrick, Simryn Gill, Dinh Q. Le. Co-curated with Janice Cheddie, Sharmini Pereira and Sally Tallant.
2001
Local Artists, AI-Saqi Bookshop, London, an exhibition of International artists living in London W2. Artists: Anna Thew, Robert Taylor, David Medalla, Caryle Reedy, Tina Keene. Co-curated with Mai Ghossoub.
Martin, Spitz Gallery, London. Post graduate students, Central Saint Martins.
2002
Ford, Oxford House, Ashley Gardens and 1&1, Three East London galleries. Post graduate students, Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design.
2006
Aug 9th – Nov 11th. The Sixth Gwangju Biennale 2006: Fever Variations, First Chapter. Gwangju Biennale Hall, Gwangju. Chief Curator Wu Hung, with Curators Shaheen Merali and Binghui Huangfu and Collaborating Curator Jacquelynn Baas. Featuring artists: Lida Abdul, Lise Autogena & Joshua Portway, Thomas Bayrle, Dove Bradshaw, Chen Chieh-jen, Choi Jung Hwa, Choi Min Hwa, David Hammons, Hong Lei, Michael Joo, Jitish Kallat, Akio Kamisato/Satoshi Shibata/Takehisa Mashimo, Kim Jong-ku, Kim Sang Yoen, Sun K. Kwak, Dinh Q. Le, Lee Jong Sang, Lee Soo Kyung, Lee Ufan, Shu-min Lin, Armin Linke, Susan Meiselas, Rei Naito, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Vong Phaophanit, Jean-Marc Pelletier, Qiu Zhijie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michal Rovner, Hiroshi Senju, Raqib Shaw, Chiharu Shiota, Shon Bong Chae, Song Dong, Manit Sriwanichpoon, Sissel Tolaas, Vasan Sitthiket, Suzann Victor, Chris Welsby, Whang In-kie, Miwa Yanagi, Zhang Dali, Zhang Huan, Zheng Liu, Xu Bing.
=== 2003-2008: Haus der Kulturen der Welt ===
2004 The Black Atlantic – Travelling Cultures, Counter-Histories, Networked Identities, Exhibition Curator. Featuring artists: Isaac Julien, Keith Piper, Lisl Ponger, Tim Sharp.
2005 Dreams and Trauma – a film festival and moving images installations, an exhibition by twelve artists of Palestinian and Israeli origin, Exhibition and Film Curator. Featuring artists: Guy Ben-Ner, Yael Bartana, Ori Gersht, Talia Keinan, Sigalit Landau, Sharone Lifschitz, Rashid Masharawi, Rosalind Nashabishi, Nira Pereg, Karen Russo, Ruti Sela & Maayan Amir, Doron Solomons and Tanya Ury.
2007 New York States Of Mind – Art And The City, Exhibition and Film Curator. Featuring artists: Iona Rozeal Brown, Ian Burns, Laura Carton, Carolina Caycedo, CUP, Marcel Duchamp, Rainer Ganahl, Hans Haacke, David Hammons, Jonathan Horowitz, Tehching Hsieh, Kim Jones, Jon Kessler, Mark Lombardi, Mary Ellen Mark, Sarah Morris, Gordon Matta-Clark, Josephine Meckseper, Ana Mendieta, William Pope.L, Printed Matter, Inc., Elaine Reichek, Carolee Schneemann, Ward Shelley, Tavares Strachan, Kehinde Wiley, Fred Wilson, Jordan Wolfson, Terence Koh, Nikki S. Lee, Patty Chang.
2008 Re-Imagining Asia – A Thousand Years Of Separation, Film Curator and Exhibition Co-curator with Wu Hung. Featuring artists: Chiho Aoshima, Parastou Forouhar, Subodh Gupta, Andreas Gursky, Ikeda Manabu, Michael Joo, Johannes Kahrs, Bharti Kher, Kim Jongku, Kimsooja, Sun K. Kwak, Dinh Q. Lê, Miao Xiaochun, Ujino Muneteru, Gabriel Orozco, Rashid Rana, Ki-bong Rhee, Takako Saito, Shen Shaomin, Shi Jinsong, Song Dong, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Zhang Dali.
=== Bodhi Art 2008 ===
Frontlines: Notations from the Contemporary India Urban, BodhiBerlin. Featuring artists: Subodh Gupta, Atul Dodiya, Zarina Hashmi, Jitish Kallat, Riyas Komu, Valsan Kolleri, Nataraj Sharma.
Shilpa Gupta: Blindstars, Starsblind, BodhiBerlin.
Everywhere is War (and rumours of war), BodhiMumbai. Featuring artists: Subodh Gupta, Jitish Kallat, Hema Upadhyay, Bharti Kher, Francesco Clemente, Jon Kessler, Sara Rahbar, Zarina Hashmi, Shilpa Gupta, Prasad Raghavan, Pablo Bartholomew, Rashid Rana, Sumedh Raghavan, Alicia Framis, Reena Kallat, Chitra Ganesh, Jaishri Abichandani, Anita Dube, Rina Banerjee, Atul Dodiya, Anju Dodiya, Riyas Komu, Baiju Parthan, Vibha Galhotra, Amar Kanwar, Bose Krisnamachari.
The Urban Spiel – a study of sculpture and material, BodhiBerlin. Featured artists: Paul Eachus, Rob Voerman and Sumedh Rajendran.
Nataraj Sharma and N.S. Harsha at abc art berlin contemporary, BodhiBerlin.
Jitish Kallat: Public Notice 2, BodhiSingapore.
Riyas Komu: Related List, BodhiBerlin.
=== Meraliart ===
2009
Indian Popular Culture and Beyond, Alcalá 31, Madrid. Featured artists: Jaishri Abichandani, Shezad Dawood, CK Rajan, GR Iranna, Riyas Komu, Prasad Raghavan, Sara Rahbar.
The Augmented Flaws, Kunstagenten Gallery, Berlin. Featured artists: Daniele Buetti, Rajkamal Kahlon, Jon Kessler, Leila Pazooki.
The Dark Science of Five Continents, Gallery BMB, Mumbai. Featuring artists: Jake and Dinos Chapman, Tunga, George Osodi, Riyas Komu, Jon Kessler, Wang Qingsong.
Eerie and languid, Artisterium09, National Museum Tbilisi, Georgia. Featuring artist: Laleh Khorramian, Carlos Amorales, Jean-Gabriel Périot.
The Promise of Loss: a contemporary index of Iran, Brot Kunsthalle, Vienna. Featuring artists: Samira Abbassy, Iman Afsarian, Asgar/Gabriel, Masoumeh Bakhtyari, Shahram Entekhabi, Parastou Forouhar, Shadi Ghadirian, Babak Golkar, Peyman Hooshmandzadeh, Abbas Kowsari, Mandana Moghaddam, Amin Nourani, Sara Rahbar, Neda Razavipour, Behrang Samadzadegan, Rozita Sharafjahan, Jinoos Taghizadeh.
2010
The Promise of Loss: a contemporary index of Iran, Arario Gallery, New York. Featuring artists: Samira Abbassy, Iman Afsarian, Asgar/Gabriel, Masoumeh Bakhtyari, Shahram Entekhabi, Parastou Forouhar, Shadi Ghadirian, Babak Golkar, Peyman Hooshmandzadeh, Abbas Kowsari, Mandana Moghaddam, Amin Nourani, Sara Rahbar, Neda Razavipour, Behrang Samadzadegan, Rozita Sharafjahan, Jinoos Taghizadeh.
Never Run Away, Stux Gallery, New York. Featuring artists: Reena Kallat, Sara Rahbar.
East City: Kolkata Before the campaign, Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata. Artist: Leena Kejriwal.
Safe to Light, Azad Gallery, Tehran. Artist: Riyas Komu.
3 Voices in my head, Freies Museum, Berlin. Featuring artists: Ulrich Volz, Yvette Mattern, Gregg LeFevre.
The Stalking of Absence (vis-à-vis) Iran, Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, Tokyo. Featuring artists: Reza Abedini, Matilda Aslizadeh, Bahar Behbahani, Ramesch Daha, Sarah Dolatabadi, Ghazel, Raha Rastifard, Newsha Tavakolian.
The 11th Hour, An Exhibition of Contemporary Art from India/Diaspora, Tang Contemporary, Beijing. Featuring artists: Tariq Alvi, Madhu and Hazra Chitrakar, Shilpa Gupta, Tushar Joag, The Otolith Group, Baiju Parthan, TV Santosh, Tejal Shah, Sudharsan Shetty, Thukral & Tagra.
Cinema Verite Redux, Sumukha Gallery, Bangalore. Featuring artists: Subba Ghosh, Ravi Kashi, Attila Richard Lucas, Parvathi Nayar, Charly Nijensohn, Prasad Raghavan, Marina Roy.
Besides Paris, Birla Academy of Arts and Culture, Kolkata. Featuring artists: Narayanan Akkitham, Sujata Bajaj, Madhu Mangal Basu, Maya Burman, Sakti Burman, Utpal Chakraborty, Anju Chaudhuri, Rajendra Dhawan, Lakshmi Dutt, Debesh Goswami, Bhawani Katoch, Gadadhar Ojha, Sharmila Roy Pommot, S.H. Raza, Inderjeet Sahdev, Nitin Shroff, Jiwan Singh, Viswanadhan Velu.
Twice is too much, Freies Museum, Berlin. Featuring artists: Hassan Hajjaj and Zak Ové.
Tough Love: a series of promises, Plataforma Revólver, Lisbon. Featuring artists: Samira Abbassy, Arahmaiani, Marc Bijl, Cecília Costa, Agathe de Bailliencourt, Nezaket Ekici, Mathias Herrmann, Gregg LeFevre, Zak Ové, K P Reji, Isabel Ribeiro, Jinoos Taghizadeh.
The Archivists’ Impatience, The LOFT, Mumbai. Featuring artists: Daniel G. Andújar, Pablo Bartholomew, Leila Pazooki, Jean-Gabriel Périot.
Public Enemy Number 1, Exhibit 320, New Delhi. Featuring artists: Gordon Cheung, Radhika Khimji, Prasad Raghavan, Iona Rozeal Brown, Mithu Sen.
2011
when the moon is lying the sea weeps and dark safaris destroy the destroyed, India Art Summit, New Delhi. Featuring Artists: Madhu Mangal Basu, Koumudi Patil, Raha Rastifard, Sandip Pisalkar, Priti Vadhakkath, Nandan Ghyia.
Entropic Sites, Shrine Empire, New Delhi. Artist: Leena Kejriwal.
Regarding Iran, The Guild, Mumbai. Featuring artists: Amin Nourani, Barbad Golshiri, Farideh Lashaei, Mitra Tabrizian, Mohammad Hossein Emad, Peyman Hooshmandzadeh, Shirin Neshat.
I saw that which had remained unseen, Azad Gallery, Tehran. Artist: Leena Kejriwal.
The (Iranian) Weltanschauung, Freies Museum, Berlin. Featuring artists: Mehraneh Atashi, Navid Azimi Sajadi, Mahmood Bakhshi, Masoumeh Bakhtiary, Majid Fathizadeh, Parastou Farouhar, Farhad Fozouni, Ghazaleh Hedayat, Taha Heydary, Melodie Hosainzadeh, Katayoun Karami, Aria Kasaei, Majid K. Behesti, Azadeh Madani, Amir Mobed, Mehran Mohajer, Masoumeh Mozafari, Homan Nobakht, Sara Roohisefat, Atefeh Samaei, Rozita Sharafjahan, Mohamad M. Tabatabaie, Farideh Lashaei.
The calculus of the dead load or "How one becomes what one is" (Nietzsche), THE LOFT, Mumbai.
2012
The International, as part of the Odyssey, 45 years with the collection, Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata. Featuring artists: Jean Arp, Maurice Golubov, Nicholas Roerich, Louise Bourgeois, Olle Beartling, Adolf Fleischmann, Andre Masson, Amrita Sher-Gil, Augustus Rodin, Gustav Klimt, Pablo Picasso, Hedde Sterne.
When Violence Becomes Decadent, Freies Museum, Berlin. Featuring artists: Sarnath Banerjee, Binu Bhaskar, Rajib Chowdhury, Samit Das, Natasha de Betak, Probir Gupta, Rajkamal Kahlon, Jitish Kallat, Leena Kejriwal, Simit Raveshia.
The Indian Parallax, Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata. Featuring artists: Shebba Chhacchi, Remen Chopra, Vibha Galhotra, Probir Gupta, Jitish Kallat, Reena Kallat, Chittrovanu Mazumdar, Manish Nai, Mithu Sen, Hema Uppadhyay.
Refraction: Moving Images on Palestine, P21 Gallery, London. Featuring artists: Mohammad Al-Hawajri, Kamal Aljafari, Tayseer Barakat, Mike Hoolboom, Khaled Hourani, Khaled Jarrar, Josh Jones, kennardphillipps, Inzajeano Latif, Manal Mahamid, Laila Shawa, Nasser Soumi, Tarzan and Arab Nasser.
2013
(After) Love at Last Sight, Nezaket Ekici Solo Exhibition, Pi Artworks, London.
Speaking from the heart - The Polemic Sensibility from Iran, Castrum Peregrini, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Featuring artists: Mehraneh Atashi, Navid Azimi Sajadi, Mahmood Bakhshi, Masoumeh Bakhtiary, Majid Fathizadeh, Parastou Forouhar, Farhad Fozouni, Ghazaleh Hedayat, Taha Heydary, Melodi Hosainzadeh, Katayoun Karami, Aria Kasaei, Majid Korang Beheshti, Amir Mobed, Mehran Mohajer, Masoumeh Mozafari, Homan Nobakht, Sara Roohisefat, Atefeh Samaei, Rozita Sharafjahan, Mohamad M. Tabatabaei.
When Violence Becomes Decadent, ACC Gallery Weimar, Germany. Featuring artists: Sarnath Banerjee, Binu Bhaskar, Rajib Chowdhury, Samit Das, Natasha de Betak, Probir Gupta, Rajkamal Kahlon, Jitish Kallat, Leena Kejriwal, Simit Raveshia.
2014
Fragile Hands, a curatorial essay on stated subjectivities. University of Applied Arts, Heilingenkreuzer Hof, Refektorium and Sala Terrena, Vienna, Austria. Featuring artists: Mohammed Al-Hawajri, Palestine/Masoumeh Bakhtiary, Iran/Binu Bhaskar, India/ Madhu und Hazra Chitrakar, India/ Rajib Chowdhury, India/ Ramesch Daha, Austria &Iran/ Natasha de Betak, France &India/ Majid Fathizadeh, Iran/ Debesh Goswami, India & France/ Probir Gupta, India/ Ghazaleh Hedayat, Iran/ Taha Heydary, Iran/ Khaled Jarrar, Palestine/ Rajkamal Kahlon, USA, India &Germany/ Katayoun Karami, Iran/ Leena Kejriwal, India/ Amir Mobed, Iran/ Masoumeh Mozafari, Iran/ Tarzan and Arab, Palestine/ Charley Nijensohn, Argentina & Germany/ Amin Nourani, Iran/ Lisl Ponger, Austria/ Simit Raveshia, India/ Oliver Ressler, Austria/ Atefeh Samaei, Iran/ Rozita Sharafjahan, Iran/ JJ Xi, China & UK/.
Berlin Heist, the Enduring Fascination with Walled Cities, 4th Mediation Biennale, Where Somewhere Becomes Here. Featuring artists: Anonymous, Kader Attia, Marc Bijl, Nezeket Ekici, Azin Feizabadi+, Thomas Florschuetz, Carla Guagliardi, Johannes Kahrs, Jonathan Meese, Leila Pazooki, Julian Rosefeldt, Esra Rotthoff, Enis Rotthoff, Iris Schomaker, Lars Teichmann, Ming Wong, Michael Wutz.
2015
Make In India, Production and presentation of designer Prasad Raghavan work for the Indian Pavilion at Hannover Messe 2015.
== Writing ==
=== Academic books ===
2001
«Going Native: revisited» in Beyond Frontiers: Contemporary British Art by Artists of South Asian Descent. Amal Ghosh and Juginder Lamba, eds. (London: Saffron Books, Eastern Art Publishing, 2001).
2002
«Anthology of art», Jochen Grez project on the web, What is your vision of an unknown art?.
«Claiming Multiple Identities», 151M Newsletter 10/02, The Netherlands (with Mai Ghoussoub) & Abwab 31.
«Panchayat», interarchive, editor Hans Ulrich Obrist, Kunstraum der Universitat Lunenburg, Verlag der buchhandlung Walther Konig, Kaln, 2002, 276–280.
2004
«Tehrancentric & Iraninity»,Far Near Distance – Contemporary Positions of Iranian Artists, co-edited by Shaheen Merali. Berlin: House of World Cultures.
Interviews to Isaac Julien, Keith Piper, Lisl Ponger and Tim Sharp (German), The Black Atlantic – Travelling Cultures, Counter-Histories, Networked Identities. Berlin: House of World Cultures.
«Curatorial Statement», The Black Atlantic – Travelling Cultures, Counter-Histories, Networked Identities. Berlin: House of World Cultures.
«Fun is the new weapon, Gridthiya Gaweewong in conversation with Shaheen Merali and Annette Bhagwati», Spaces and Shadows – Contemporary Art from Southeast Asia, ed. by Shaheen Merali. Berlin: House of World Cultures, 2005, 34 – 35.
«States of Mind», New York States Of Mind – Art And The City, ed. by Shaheen Merali. London: Saqi Books, 2008, 16 – 28.
«Guilt Guilded in Gold», Voices of Change: 20 Indian Artists, ed. by Gayatri Sinha. Mumbai: Marg Foundation, 2010, 266 – 281.
«Between the Satanic Verses and the Axis of Evil», Voices of Change: 20 Indian Artists, ed. by Gayatri Sinha. Mumbai: Marg Foundation, 2010, 198 – 211.
«Delienating the vernacular», in Public Notice 3: Jitish Kallat at the Art Institute of Chicago, ed. by Madhuvanti Ghose. Chicago: The Art Institute of Chicago and Yale University Press, 2011, 39 – 45.
2012
«Slower Lower Weaker», in The Unknown as you know it, ed. by Marek Wasilewski. Poznan: University of Arts Poznan, 60–69.
2013
«The Untold (the Rise of) Schisms», InFLUX, Contemporary Art in Asia. Ed. By Parul Dave Mukherji, Naman P.Ahuja & Kavita Singh. Sage Publications India, 183–196.
2015
«The Spectre (of Knowledge): Recording the Vernacular», Contemporary Art from the Middle East, Ed. By Hamid Keshmirshekan, IB Tauris, 89–97.
«The Spectre (of Knowledge): Recording the Cosmopolitan», Dissonant Archives, Contemporary Visual Culture and Contested Narratives in the Middle East, Edited by Anthony Downey, I.B.Tauris, 432–444.
2016
«(After) Love at Last Sight….Nezaket Ekici» The Live Art Almanac Volume 4. Edited by Harriet Curtis, Lois Keidan and Aaron Wright, Oberon Books London, 76–82.
«Refractions: From Their Nemesis, the (Dis)obedience», CONFLICT AND COMPASSION A Paradox of difference in Contemporary Asian Art Edited by Bashir Makhoul and Alnoor Mitha, HOME Manchester, 143–160.
=== Catalogues ===
1999
Carte Blanche / the white papers. Lethaby Press & Panchayat. Editor and contributor.
2008
Eric Soeutre, France.
Technology: Detection or Deception. Endword. Radical Postures. Panchayat Publication. ACE Funded. Spring 1998.
Displaces, exhibition by Mai Ghoussoub and Souheil Sieiman. Saqi Books, London.
India Crossing, Studio La Città, Verona. Essay: India Crossing…The Discursive as an image.
2009
India Contemporary, Gem Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Den Haag.Essay 1: Exposed Tendencies. Essay 2: Guilt Guilded in Gold.
Being, Spirit or Ghost, Gallery OED, Cochin, Kerala. Essay: Being, Spirit or Ghost.
Anomalies, From Nature to Future, Rossi&Rossi, London. Essay: Diasporic Sciences, 9–16.
2010
Sara Rahbar, Carbon 12, Dubai. Essay: Across Ideas, Across Continents.
Blood and Spit - New Works by TV Santosh, Jack Shainman Gallery, NY. Essay: The Chimera War.
2012
Navid Azimi Sajadi, Olcay Art Gallery, Caddebostan, Istanbul. Catalogue essay.
The Indian Parallax, Birla Academy of Art & Culture, Kolkata. Editor and essay: The Indian Parallax or the Doubling of Happiness: works in two-dimension and sculpture towards the third image – the abstract reality.
2014
Fragile Hands, A curatorial essay on stated subjectivities, University of Applied Arts, Vienna. Editor and key essay: Fragile Hands, A curatorial essay on stated subjectivities.
Under Different Skies, Third Text (Issue 37). (1997)
Displaces, Third Text (Issue 39). (1997)
Extravagant strangers, Third Text (Issue 41, edited by Caryl Phillips). (1998)
Kay Hassan, Third Text (Issue 55, Summer 01). (2001)
Rashid Rana Interview, Indian Contemporary Art Journal. (2012)
The struggle for the Sublime, Art Tomorrow (issues 2–6). (2012)
The Chitrakars; artisans amplifying the local contexts. Raw Vision. (2015)
The Story Scrolls of Bengal | Raw Vision Magazine !!!
On the critical decades and the role of archives. Shwetal Patel in discussion with Shaheen Merali. (2017)
critical collective check
== Artistic practice ==
=== Solo exhibitions ===
Channels, Echoes & Empty Chairs, Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham and South London Gallery, London. Commissioned by Angel Row Gallery. (1993)
Torchlights, Brick Lane Police Station, East london. Commissioned by the Whitechapel Art Gallery. (1994)
Paradigms lost, Travelling Gallery, toured North and East Scotland as part of fotofeis 95. Commissioned by Scottish Arts Council. (1999)
Dark Matters, Kunsthalle Exnergasse, Vienna, Austria. (2000)
Dark Matters II, Art Exchange, Nottingham. (2001)
U blow me away, Window Gallery, Central Saint Martins, London. (2001)
=== Group exhibitions ===
Box Project, The Museum of Installation, London, Turnpike Gallery, Leigh and Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham. (CD Rom Catalogue). (1999)
Alien/Nation, Sixpack Films, Vienna, Austria. (1999)
Translocation, Photographers Gallery, London and Institute for Research on the African Diaspora and Caribbean, City College of New York. (1999)
Transforming the Crown, Bronx Museum of Art, New York, USA. (1999)
Out of India, Queens Museum, Flushing Meadows, New York, USA. (1999)
Men and Masculinities, James Hockey Gallery, Surrey Institute of Education, Farnham, Surrey. (1999)
Zero Zero Zero, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London. (1999)
The Crown Jewels, Kampnagel, Hamburg and NGBK, Berlin. (1999)
Empire and I, Pitshanger Museum and Gallery, London and AXIOM centre, Cheltenham. (1999)
Machos y Muecas, La Casa Elizaide, Barcelona. (1999)
Ubudoda, Metropolitan Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa. (2000)
Chanting Heads CD Rom. Curated by David a Bailey & Sonia Boyce, AAVAA. (2001)
Colored folks (performance), Toynbee Hall, London. Collaboration with Oreet Ashery. (2001)
The Globe, Centre Beirut, Lebanon. Curated by Dave Beech. (2001)
Whats wrong?, The Trade Apartments, London. (2001)
Dressing, Readdressing, collaboration with Mai Ghoussoub. AI-Saqi Books, London. (2001)
Host, Hastings Gallery and Museum. Curated by Mario Rossi. (2001)
A Man, A Woman, A Machine, Centre of Attention, London. (2001)
Site & Sight, Asian Civilisation Museum, Singapore. (2002)
Hygiene, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Curated by Pam Skelton and Tony Fletcher. (2002)
=== Video screenings ===
I loose my voice in my dreams (45 mins). South London Gallery, London. (1993)
I loose my voice in my dreams (45 mins). Galerie 101, Ottawa, Canada. (1994)
Pandemonium, ICA, London; Rotterdam 97-26 Film festival, Holland; Desh Pradesh, Toronto, Canada; Whitechapel Open, Curtain Rd Gallery, London; KIZ- Kino, Granz, Austria; Scratch Projection, Paris, France; Tokyo 97-Image Forum, Festival, Tokyo, Japan; Pesaro 97-Film Festival, Roma, Italy; Hamburg 97–13. International Kurzfilm-Festival & No., Hamburg, Germany; Jerusalem 97-Film Festival, Jerusalem, Israel; São Paulo 97-Short Film Festival, São Paulo, Brazil; Austin 97. Cinematexas- Int. short film + video + new, Austin, USA.(1997)
Exploding Cinema, Kenington, London. (1998)
The post-colonial cities, curated by inIVA. The Lux Cinema, London. (1999)
Colored Folks (18 mins) Colored Folks video and photographs. National Review of Live Arts. (2002)
Paradigms Lost Pt. 1 (5 mins 10 Secs). (2002)
2016 (as performer) revisiting genesis (11 Episodes) (11 mins each) Written and Directed by Oreet Ashery, Stanley Picker Gallery and Online. (2002)
|
[
"Gordon Cheung",
"Rosalind Nashabishi",
"Paul Pfeiffer (artist)",
"University of Westminster",
"Geeta Kapur",
"Reza Abedini",
"Sigalit Landau",
"Rashid Masharawi",
"Tate",
"Doron Solomons",
"Shezad Dawood",
"Institute of Contemporary Arts",
"Atul Dodiya",
"Watermans Arts Centre",
"Zhang Dali",
"Chris Welsby",
"Shahram Entekhabi",
"Ian Burn",
"Rob Voerman",
"Subodh Gupta",
"Miwa Yanagi",
"Saint Martin's School of Art",
"Central Saint Martins",
"Lida Abdul",
"Sarah Morris",
"Yvette Mattern",
"Susan Meiselas",
"Tarzan and Arab Nasser",
"Wu Hung",
"Soweto",
"Tehching Hsieh",
"Laleh Khorramian",
"Amrita Sher-Gil",
"Mike Hoolboom",
"Jacquelynn Baas",
"Lise Autogena",
"Carlos Amorales",
"Haus der Kulturen der Welt",
"Havana",
"Shadi Ghadirian",
"Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook",
"Sujata Bajaj",
"Mombasa",
"Adolf Fleischmann",
"Farideh Lashai",
"Tayseer Barakat",
"Zarina (artist)",
"Vibha Galhotra",
"Courtauld Institute of Art",
"Carolee Schneemann",
"Jaishri Abichandani",
"Mitra Tabrizian",
"Iona Rozeal Brown",
"Nicholas Roerich",
"Guy Ben-Ner",
"Andreas Gursky",
"Marc Bijl",
"International Center of Photography",
"Marcel Duchamp",
"Simryn Gill",
"Fred Wilson (artist)",
"Amar Kanwar",
"London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine",
"Rei Naito",
"Jonathan Meese",
"Nikki S. Lee",
"Barbad Golshiri",
"Don Cherry (trumpeter)",
"Anita Dube",
"Joshua Portway",
"Kehinde Wiley",
"Nira Pereg",
"Tejal Shah",
"Samira Abbassy",
"Said Adrus",
"Mai Ghoussoub",
"Allan deSouza",
"Laila Shawa",
"Tanganyika (territory)",
"Hans Haacke",
"curator",
"UCL Institute of Education",
"Raqib Shaw",
"Dove Bradshaw",
"Rajkamal Kahlon",
"Kampnagel",
"Vasan Sitthiket",
"Daniele Buetti",
"Queens Museum",
"University of the West Indies",
"André Masson",
"Mark Lombardi",
"Shilpa Gupta",
"Bose Krishnamachari",
"Gustav Klimt",
"Jean Arp",
"Oreet Ashery",
"Khaled Jarrar",
"Anju Chaudhuri",
"Hiroshi Senju",
"Dinh Q. Lê",
"Old Spitalfields Market",
"Chittrovanu Mazumdar",
"Jake and Dinos Chapman",
"Tanzania",
"Mohammad Hossein Emad",
"Zhang Huan",
"Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba",
"T. V. Santhosh",
"Hedda Sterne",
"Miao Xiaochun",
"Qiu Zhijie",
"William Pope.L",
"Tanzanian",
"Gordon Matta-Clark",
"Riyas Komu",
"Vong Phaophanit",
"Maya Burman",
"Sarnath Banerjee",
"Khaled Hourani",
"Josephine Meckseper",
"Carolina Caycedo",
"Pablo Bartholomew",
"Kader Attia",
"Asian Civilisations Museum",
"Julian Rosefeldt",
"Ruti Sela",
"Thukral & Tagra",
"Gerardo Mosquera",
"Chila Kumari Burman",
"Third Text",
"Keith Piper (artist)",
"Xu Bing",
"Bharti Kher",
"Terence Koh",
"Yael Bartana",
"Peyman Hooshmandzadeh",
"Kimsooja",
"Chitra Ganesh",
"Mandana Moghaddam",
"Hong Lei (artist)",
"S. H. Raza",
"Tavares Strachan",
"Jon Kessler",
"Hema Upadhyay",
"Francesco Clemente",
"Baiju Parthan",
"Sissel Tolaas",
"Mary Ellen Mark",
"Rainer Ganahl",
"Chiho Aoshima",
"Arahmaiani",
"Jitish Kallat",
"David Hammons",
"Ana Mendieta",
"Jordan Wolfson",
"Gwangju Biennale",
"Sara Rahbar",
"Michal Rovner",
"South London Gallery",
"Zak Ové",
"Shirin Neshat",
"Sonia Boyce",
"Parastou Forouhar",
"Bronx Museum of the Arts",
"Johannes Kahrs (artist)",
"Rashid Rana",
"Whitechapel Gallery",
"Tam Joseph",
"Maayan Amir",
"Pablo Picasso",
"Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de La Habana",
"Matilda Aslizadeh",
"Louise Bourgeois",
"Lee Ufan",
"Kamal Aljafari",
"Newsha Tavakolian",
"Sakti Burman",
"Cartwright Hall",
"Victoria and Albert Museum",
"Ori Gersht",
"Jonathan Horowitz",
"Song Dong",
"Raha Rastifard",
"Chiharu Shiota"
] |
62,102,916 |
Jodi Kovitz
|
Jodi Kovitz (born in 1978) is a Canadian lawyer and nonprofit executive. She is the founder and CEO of #MoveTheDial, an organization to advance the participation and leadership of women in tech.
== Background ==
Kovitz was born in Calgary, Alberta, the daughter of lawyer Jeff Kovitz and Karen Katchen. She has five siblings. Her father was a lawyer and is currently a businessman; her mother is a psychologist and executive coach.
Her mother moved to Toronto, Ontario, and married Bernie Katchen when Kovitz was six years old. She attended Forest Hill Collegiate Institute in Toronto.
In 1997 she enrolled at the University of Western Ontario at the Ivey Business School. She graduated in 2000 with a degree in Honours Business Administration, Bachelor of Arts. While at Western, she founded HandHeld Cards, a small business venture. She also created the CT Investment Challenge, an student focused, internet based game to raise funds for the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada; Kovitz studied international finance, at Commerciale L. Bocconi, Milan in Italy from January to June 2000.
In 2003 Kovitz enrolled in Osgoode Hall Law School. She graduated in 2005 with a Bachelor of Laws.
== Career ==
After graduating from business school, Kovitz worked at Workbrain as a marketing specialist from 2000 through 2001. In 2002 she joined Scotiabank, working in leadership resource management.
Kovitz was called to the Ontario Bar in 2006 and was an associate in the family law department of Torkin Manes from 2006 until 2011. In 2011 she joined Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt, directing client and business development, and leading growth initiatives. She continued in this role for five years; in 2014 she also volunteered as political advisor to lawyer Ari Goldkind during his campaign for mayor of Toronto.
In 2016 Kovitz became the chief executive officer of AceTech Ontario, a peer to peer community of technology executives. This organization was later renamed PeerScale. That year she joined John Tory's trade delegation to Israel.
In 2017 Kovitz, with five others, organized the first Elevate Toronto event, a three-day festival which promoted Canadian innovation. That year she founded #movethedial, a global social enterprise with a mission to advance the participation of women in tech. In her role as CEO,
After organizing local talks in its first year, in 2018 #movethedial held a full-day conference in Toronto, with about 1,000 attendees, presenting workshops and speakers from the tech community; a second conference in 2019 drew about 3,000 attendees. Arising from the restrictions relating to the pandemic, Kovitz discontinued #movethedial.
In 2018 Kovitz spoke at the Jewish Ethics Defined (JEDx) conference in Toronto. That year she helped organize the successful campaign for the re-election of John Tory, Mayor of Toronto.
In 2023 Kovitz was appointed as Chief Executive Officer of The Human Resources Professionals Association (HRPA) of Ontario.
Kovitz also sits the advisory boards of the Whitecap Venture Capital Fund Advisory Board, Maple, Protexxa, and Toronto Global.
==Community==
Kovitz is part of the Sickkids' Hospital Capital Campaign Cabinet which raises money for pediatric health in Ontario; as part of that initiative she is co-chair of the #tech4SickKids fundraising committee.
Kovitz has joined the Education and Human Resources Committee of the Board of Directors Sunnybrook Hospital as a community member.
==Awards and recognition==
Kovitz was recognized as one of Canada's 25 Women of Influence in 2018 Kovitz was named the International Association of Business Communicators/Toronto, Communicator of the Year for 2020.
Kovitz received an honorary degree (LLD) from the University of Calgary on June 1 2023.
|
[
"The Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto)",
"Ontario",
"Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt",
"John Tory",
"Ivey Business School",
"Calgary",
"Law Society of Ontario",
"University of Western Ontario",
"Bocconi University",
"Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada",
"PricewaterhouseCoopers",
"Daily Hive",
"Toronto",
"Forest Hill Collegiate Institute",
"Bachelor of Laws",
"Alberta",
"Scotiabank",
"MaRS Discovery District",
"Osgoode Hall Law School"
] |
62,102,918 |
Bujlood
|
Bujlood (, lit. father of pelts) or Bilmawen (, ) is a folk Amazigh celebration observed annually after Eid al-Adha in parts of Morocco in which a person or more wears the pelt of the livestock sacrificed on Eid al-Adha.
== Etymology ==
The term Bujlood comes from the Arabic (meaning father, or possessor) and (plural of jild , meaning skin, leather, or pelt), so means father or possessor of pelts.
The term in Tamazight is .
== Observance ==
The celebration begins with a carnival, usually on the day after Eid al-Adha, when young people wear masks and the skins of the sheep or goats that were sacrificed on the Eid. They dance around in their masks and costumes carrying limbs of the sacrificed animals, which they use to play with people they run into and trying to touch them. The point is to spread laughter and cheer.
== Interpretations ==
The French ethnologists Edmond Doutté and connect the tradition to pre-Islamic Amazigh rites celebrating the changing of seasons and death and resurrection. The Finnish anthropologist Edvard Westermarck connected the tradition to the Roman Saturnalia festival.
The Moroccan anthropologist Abdellah Hammoudi, in his essay The Victim and Its Masks: An Essay on Sacrifice and Masquerade in the Maghreb, refutes these interpretations and contextualizes bujlood as a Moroccan cultural practice inseparable from the Eid al-Adha sacrifice.
has also written about the sacrifice traditions of the Ait Mizan and the Ait Souka in the High Atlas.
|
[
"Edvard Westermarck",
"Berber languages",
"Ait Mizan",
"Ait Souka",
"High Atlas",
"Eid al-Adha",
"carnival",
"Ab (Semitic)",
"Amazigh",
"Abdellah Hammoudi",
"Wudu",
"Edmond Doutté",
"Agadir",
"Salah",
"Saturnalia",
"Arabic",
"Morocco"
] |
62,102,919 |
File:XHIT ExaFM99.7 logo.jpg
|
== Summary ==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,102,920 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Won Institute of Graduate Studies (2nd nomination)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. Kudpung กุดผึ้ง (talk) 09:39, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Won Institute of Graduate Studies===
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non-notable private educational institute. PepperBeast (talk) 13:29, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Automated comment: This AfD was not correctly transcluded to the log (step 3). I have transcluded it to Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2019 October 19. —cyberbot ITalk to my owner:Online 13:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Schools-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 16:31, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Pennsylvania-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 16:31, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Education-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 16:32, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: There is an in-depth coverage report by Epoch Times here and mentions in several news sources on Google News. Probably, notability should also be checked on Chinese-language search engines. Furthermore, there is research about the organization here, here and here, here. Seems notable enough to me, though the writing could be a little less peacocky.--Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 14:39, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment does a single article in the Epoch Times and a couple of mentions in research papers amount to "[being] the subject of significant coverage in multiple reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject?" Seems like a tiny bit of a stretch to me. PepperBeast (talk) 20:39, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment It's more than a mention. The school itself- it's policies and approach to education- is actually the primary subject of two of the linked articles. --Spasemunki (talk) 23:43, 28 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment I don´t think Epoch Times is an independent mainstream newspaper. JimRenge (talk) 21:30, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of China-related deletion discussions. Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 14:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Buddhism-related deletion discussions. Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 14:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Health and fitness-related deletion discussions. Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 14:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
, have you looked at the studies yet? They cover much more detail than just mentioning the subject.--Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 08:24, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
I tried your links, and got one error, two paywalls, and a page snippet in Google Books, so I wasn't really able to assess. PepperBeast (talk) 12:05, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
It's not a page snippet, they are accessible pages on Google Books. And I don't see why you got an error, I can load the file without any problems. As for the paywalls, you can request the sources through WP:RX. Or if you want me to send them to your Wikimail, that's also possible.--Farang Rak Tham (Talk) 12:57, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, North America1000 17:27, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: I'm able to verify all but one of the source posted, confirming independent coverage of the school in multiple sources. It's also an accredited school of higher education in the US, which means that the accrediting body counts as another source in terms of verification of basic facts. It does need some of the semi-promotional language removed, but that's a separate issue. Won is modern Korean tradition, so there would likely be additional coverage in Korean language sources or maybe the Korean wiki would be helpful- don't know how active that project is. --Spasemunki (talk) 23:37, 28 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep per Spasemunki.4meter4 (talk) 06:06, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:AFDHOWTO",
"Won Institute of Graduate Studies",
"WP:TRANSCLUDE",
"WP:RX",
"Epoch Times"
] |
62,102,931 |
Apollonia Senmothis
|
Apollonia Senmothis (in some sources also named Senmonthis) (circa 170 BC – floruit 126 BC), was a Greek-Egyptian businesswoman.
==Life==
She was the daughter of the cavalry officer Ptolemaios Pamenos, and married the cavalry officer Dryton from Crete at the age of twenty in 150 BC. She had five daughters. Both her father and husband were ethnically Greeks in service of the Ptolemaic dynasty, but her father and his family were culturally Egyptian, and she had been given an Egyptian upbringing. She referred to herself under her Egyptian name in private, and to her Greek name in public. She lived in Pathyris.
Apollonia Senmothis became a successful businesswoman with an important position in business life. She invested in the wheat, barley and spelt trade and participated in banking. There was a noted difference in business documents and contracts she made with Egyptians, and those she signed at Greek notaries: as an Egyptian woman, she was equal to a man and signed her own documents without the interference of her husband, but as a Greek woman, she was nominally under the guardianship of her husband and her contracts was witnessed by her husband, even if this appears to have been a mere formality.
Apollonia Senmothis has left an archive of her business transactions and documents from 145 to 126 BC in the Dryton and Apollonia Archive, which are regarded as an important source of historical research.
|
[
"Crete",
"Pathyris",
"Horos son of Nechoutes",
"Dryton and Apollonia Archive",
"Ptolemaios son of Glaucias",
"floruit"
] |
62,102,932 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/mersinradikal.com
|
== Links ==
mersinradikal.com resolves to [//213.159.3.36 213.159.3.36]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 8 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,102,936 |
The Face Men Thailand season 3
|
The Face Men Thailand Season 3 is a reality show to find the best models and actors.
On 23 September 2019, there was an official press release. The new mentors of this season have been released Akamsiri Suwanasuk, Jirayu La-ongmanee, Araya Indra and Ajirapa Meisinger. Antoine Pinto is still the host of the program. With the program scheduled to air for the first time on October 5 of the same year.
==Contestants==
(ages stated are at start of filming)
==Episodes==
===Episode 1: Casting, Acting Skill, Team Selection, Photo Shoot and Promotional Video===
First aired 5 October 2019
The host Antoine Pinto welcomed 7 new contestants, after which there were 7 more contestants from the past season, 5 from The Face Men Thailand Season 2. And male contestants from The Face Thailand Season 5 2 people as follows
The Face Men Thailand season 2: Best, Bom, Paul, Kim, Film
The Face Thailand season 5: Marcos, Greg
Afterwards, the 4 mentors of this season were released, including Cicada Akamsiri, Kao Jirayu, Art Araya and Sabina Akirapa. After the introduction of Mentor The All contestants have walked the model and showed off their acting skills. In the meantime, Mentor will give points to each contestant. The next round, dressed according to their own personality, so Mentor chooses to join the team. Divided into three teams Three to five people in each team, as chosen by the mentor or the contestants.
When selecting contestants, the team still uses the same rules as previous seasons. For this round, Kim is the person who scores the most points during the audition. Therefore, can choose a team without the mentor to have the right to choose, while holding only one who has no mentor to join the team
Team Kao : Boss, Film, Marcos, Best, Thony
Team Jakjaan : Greg, Peak, Bom, Paul, CGame
Team Art/Sabina : Kim, Timmy, Jybb
After the selection of the work team is finished The first campaign was started immediately, namely shooting posters and promoting videos. In which everyone, including mentors, have to run a joint campaign Art / Sabina team with Kim, the team with the most votes from the audition, selected the ninth place to start as the first team. Followed by the cicada team And the Art / Sabina team
The winning team of the campaign: Team Art Sabina
Bottom two: None
===Episode 2: A Walk of Remembrance ===
First aired 12 October 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Art Sabina
Bottom four: Marcos Alexandre, Best Phanthakoengamon, CGame Wichaikum and Greg de Bodt
Eliminated: Best Phanthakoengamon
===Episode 3: The Love of My Life ===
First aired 19 October 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Kao
Bottom two: Peak Rattanapet and Jybb Maha-Udomporn
Eliminated: None
===Episode 4: The Ride of Dignity ===
First aired 26 October 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Jakjaan
Bottom four: Jybb Maha-Udomporn, Timmy Sanner, Kim Goodburn and Film Uengwanit
Eliminated: Kim Goodburn
===Episode 5: Love is For All ===
First aired 2 November 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Art Sabina
Bottom two: Film Uengwanit and Greg de Bodt
Eliminated: Film Uengwanit
===Episode 6: Stay Cold===
First aired 9 November 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Kao
Bottom two: Bom Thanawatyanyong and Jybb Maha-Udomporn
Eliminated: Jybb Maha-Udomporn
===Episode 7: The Magic Move===
First aired 16 November 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Art Sabina
Bottom two: Thony Blane and CGame Wichaikum
Eliminated: None
===Episode 8: New Face Mission===
First aired 23 November 2019
The winning team of the campaign: Team Art Sabina
Bottom four: Boss Darayon, Thony Blane, Marcos Alexandre and Paul de Bodt
Eliminated: Marcos Alexandre
=== Episode 9 : The Adventurous Voyage ===
First aired 30 November 2019
Winning coach and team: Team Kao
Final three was chosen by Coach: Boss, Timmy, CGame
Fourth was chosen by coach from winning campaign team: Thony
Eliminated:Peak, Bom, Greg, Paul.
Special guest: Philip Thinroj, Chamnuyn Phakdeesuk, Adam Zima
=== Episode 10: Final walk ===
First aired 8 December 2019
Winning coach and team: Team Kao
Winning campaign : Boss
The Face Men Thailand: Boss
Runner-up: CGame, Timmy, Thony
==Summaries==
===Elimination table===
The contestant was part of the winning team for the episode.
The contestant was at risk of elimination.
The contestant was eliminated from the competition.
The contestant was immune from elimination.
The contestant was immune from elimination but was at risk of elimination.
The contestant was originally eliminated but invited back as a guest in a campaign.
The contestant was a Runner-Up.
The contestant won The Face Men.
Episode 1 was the casting episode. The final thirteen were divided into individual teams of three to five as they were selected.
In episodes 2–9, contestant who was eliminated to the competition. They will be able to attend Master Class, but can't do Campaign.
In episode 2 team had lose campaign in episode 1 must choose one contestant for the elimination together with team had lose campaign in this episode. team Kao and team Jakjaan had lose campaign in 2 times. Kao nominated Best and Marcos while Jakjaan nominated CGame and Greg. Art and Sabina eliminated Best.
In episodes 3–8, after announced campaign in episode. The show will choose one contestant for give immune from elimination.
In episode 3, team Kao won the campaign. Jakjaan nominated Peak while Art and Sabina nominated Jybb for the elimination. Kao didn't eliminate both of them.
In episode 4, team Jakjaan won the campaign. Kao nominated Film while Art and Sabina nominated all contestants for the elimination. Jakjaan eliminated Kim.
In episode 7, team Art and Sabina won the campaign. Kao nominated Thony while Jakjaan nominated CGame for the elimination. Art and Sabina didn't eliminate both of them.
In episode 8, team Art and Sabina won the campaign. Kao nominated all contestants for the elimination while Jakjaan nominated Paul for the elimination. Art and Sabina eliminated Marcos.
In episode 9, Art Sabina Kao and Jakjaan were allowed to choose any one contestant to advance into the finale from the remaining eighth models. Timmy automatically advancing into the finale. Kao chose Boss. Jakjaan chose CGame. Team Kao won the campaign individually and chose Thony advancing into the finale. Paul Peak Bom and Greg were eliminated.
===Campaigns===
Episode 1: Runway, Acting Skill and Self Administered 'Transformations' (Casting) / Photo Shoot and Promotional Video
Episode 2: Thai silk costumes Fashion Show
Episode 3: Lovely Mother and Son Photoshoot
Episode 4: Fashion Video with Horse
Episode 5: Man love Man acting
Episode 6: Cool Stage Photoshoot
Episode 7: Dancing Fashion Video
Episode 8: Action short film
Episode 9: Airplane Runway Fashion Show
Episode 10: Acting and Finalwalk
|
[
"The Face Men Thailand",
"Art Arya",
"Kimberley Thitisan Goodburn",
"Sisaket Province",
"The Face Thailand (season 5)",
"Nonthaburi Province",
"Bangkok",
"Jirayu La-ongmanee",
"Thairath TV",
"The Face Men Thailand (season 2)",
"Brazil",
"Chanthaburi Province",
"Bright TV (Thailand)"
] |
62,102,937 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/bbs.mumayi.net
|
== Links ==
bbs.mumayi.net resolves to [//157.185.144.107 157.185.144.107]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \bbbs\.mumayi\.net\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:Spam blacklist (diff - )).
Link is globally blacklisted by \bbbs\.mumayi\.net\b
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 1 additions.
|
[
"m:Spam blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,102,942 |
Almshouse Branch (Isaac Branch tributary)
|
Almshouse Branch is a long 1st order tributary to Isaac Branch in Kent County, Delaware.
==Course==
Almshouse Branch rises about 3 miles southwest of Camden in Kent County, Delaware on the Cow Marsh Ditch divide. Almshouse Branch then flows north to meet Isaac Branch about 2 miles west of Wyoming, Delaware.
==Watershed==
Almshouse Branch drains of area, receives about 44.8 in/year of precipitation, has a topographic wetness index of 629.58 and is about 5% forested.
|
[
"Wyoming, Delaware",
"topographic wetness index",
"Choptank River",
"Delaware Bay",
"Atlantic Ocean",
"List of Delaware rivers",
"Isaac Branch (St. Jones River tributary)",
"Delaware",
"United States",
"Camden, Delaware",
"St. Jones River",
"Kent County, Delaware"
] |
62,102,944 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/mumayi.net
|
== Links ==
bbs.mumayi.net resolves to [//157.185.144.107 157.185.144.107]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \bbbs\.mumayi\.net\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:Spam blacklist (diff - )).
Link is globally blacklisted by \bbbs\.mumayi\.net\b
mumayi.net resolves to [//124.243.210.9 124.243.210.9]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 1 additions.
|
[
"m:Spam blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,102,945 |
File:Epitath for George Dillon.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"John Osborne"
] |
62,102,950 |
Suppose a Kid from the Last Dungeon Boonies Moved to a Starter Town
|
, abbreviated as , is a Japanese light novel series written by Toshio Satō and illustrated by Nao Watanuki. SB Creative released fifteen volumes under their GA Bunko label from February 2017 to July 2022. The light novel is licensed in North America by Yen Press and the English translation is done by Andrew Cunningham. A manga adaptation with art by Hajime Fusemachi was serialized online from September 2017 to August 2023 via Square Enix's online manga magazine Gangan Online. It has been collected in twelve tankōbon volumes. An anime television series adaptation by Liden Films aired from January to March 2021.
==Plot==
Lloyd Belladonna was raised in Kunlun, a town where everyone is extraordinarily powerful. Unable to keep up, he moves to Azami to become a soldier and make a name for himself. His intense training has given him incredible strength, speed, magic, and other talents, but his crippling self-esteem issues from being overshadowed his entire life prevent him from seeing how amazing he truly is. For example, he can often defeat monsters with one blow, but does not see this as special since his villagers treat these monsters like bugs. He goes through life oblivious to his talents and the various girls who become attracted to him.
==Characters==
Lloyd is a teenage boy from the legendary town of Kunlun who left to become a soldier in the kingdom's army. In his village, he is known as a weakling who cannot perform any typical jobs to the "normal" expected level. However, the standards of this town, in the most dangerous region of the world, are incredibly skewed and truthfully he is terrifyingly powerful by outside standards. He is kind and generous, eager to help and very humble. He excels at cooking and cleaning, but cannot be convinced of his true power.
===Manga===
A manga adaptation with art by Hajime Fusemachi was serialized in Square Enix's online manga magazine Gangan Online from September 28, 2017 to August 31, 2023. Square Enix is also publishing the series in English.
A spin-off manga with art by Souchuu titled Tatoeba Last Dungeon Mae no Mura no Shōnen ga Joban no Machi no Shokudō de Hataraku Nichijō Monogatari was serialized in Square Enix's Monthly Shōnen Gangan magazine from January 11, 2020, to February 12, 2022 and collected into four volumes.
====Volume list====
=====Suppose a Kid from the Last Dungeon Boonies Moved to a Starter Town=====
=====Tatoeba Last Dungeon Mae no Mura no Shōnen ga Joban no Machi no Shokudō de Hataraku Nichijō Monogatari=====
===Anime===
An anime television series adaptation was announced during a livestream for the "GA Fes 2019" event on October 19, 2019. The series was animated by Liden Films and directed by migmi, with Deko Akao handling series composition, Makoto Iino designing the characters, and Michiru composing the series' music. The opening theme song is performed by Haruka Yamazaki, while the ending theme song is "I'mpossible?" performed by Luce Twinkle Wink☆.
Funimation acquired the series and streamed it on its website in North America, the British Isles, Mexico, and Brazil, in Europe through Wakanim, and in Australia and New Zealand through AnimeLab. Following Sony's acquisition of Crunchyroll, the series was moved to Crunchyroll. In Southeast Asia and South Asia, Muse Communication licensed the series and streamed it on its Muse Asia YouTube channel and Bilibili in Southeast Asia.
===Video game===
A free-to-play smartphone game developed for Android and iOS devices was released in Japan and traditional Chinese-speaking areas in 2021.
|
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"Christopher Sabat",
"AnimeLab",
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"Funimation",
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"Satoshi Hino",
"Seiichirō Yamashita",
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"manga",
"Taketora (voice actor)",
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"AT-X (TV network)",
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"Sōma Saitō",
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"Krystal LaPorte",
"AbemaTV",
"iOS",
"Haruka Yamazaki",
"R. Bruce Elliott",
"Leah Clark",
"Gangan Comics",
"Miku Itō",
"Yen Press",
"Shōnen manga",
"GA Bunko",
"Mao Ichimichi",
"Square Enix",
"light novel",
"Yūko Sanpei",
"Doug Erholtz",
"Natsumi Fujiwara",
"Madoka Asahina",
"Tokyo MX",
"SB Creative"
] |
62,102,953 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/black-club.org
|
== Links ==
black-club.org resolves to [//163.43.87.209 163.43.87.209]
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Link is not on the Monitorlist.
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Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,102,959 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/citiesofash.com
|
== Links ==
citiesofash.com resolves to [//69.163.225.63 69.163.225.63]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
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None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
No users found.
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|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,102,963 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/10adventures.com
|
== Links ==
10adventures.com resolves to [//104.24.126.5 104.24.126.5]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
COIBot Monitorlist search for link 10adventures.com gives:
10adventures.com (link spam)
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
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Displayed all 14 additions.
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[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,102,971 |
Harold Dexter Hazeltine
|
Harold Dexter Hazeltine, FBA (1871–1960) was an American legal scholar.
== Early life and education ==
Born on 18 November 1871 at Warren, Pennsylvania, he was the son of a banker and attended Brown University (graduating with an AB degree in 1894) and Harvard Law School (where he earned the LLB in 1898). At Harvard, he grew increasingly interested in legal history. He then studied at the University of Berlin and completed a doctoral dissertation; he was awarded the degree of juris utriusque doctor (JUD) in 1905.
== Career ==
In 1906, he was appointed lecturer in law at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1906 and was acquainted with F. W. Maitland, after whose death that year the post of Reader in Law at the University of Cambridge became vacant. In 1908, Hazeltine was appointed to the readership and was also elected a fellow of Emmanuel College. In 1919, he was appointed Downing Professor of the Laws of England and moved as a fellow to Downing College; he remained in the post until 1942, although he returned to the United States in 1940 after the Second World War broke out.
Hazeltine's doctoral thesis formed the basis of his first book, Die Geschichte des englischen Pfandrechts, a history of mortgages in English law, published in 1907. He authored Law of the Air in 1911, an early work on aviation law. He instigated the Cambridge Studies in English Legal History series in 1921, which he edited for twelve volumes. He also contributed towards The Cambridge Medieval History in 1926. Hazeltine was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1924. He was known for his ability to synthesise existing legal scholarship but made few original contributions or investigations. He published little aside from book reviews from the mid-1920s.
After leaving Cambridge, he lived out the remainder of his life in the United States, with an office at Harvard Law School. He died on 23 January 1960.
== Likenesses ==
Harold Dexter Hazeltine, by Walter Stoneman (bromide print, 1932): Photographs Collection, National Portrait Gallery, London (ref. NPG x168229).
|
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62,102,984 |
Vice President of the Supreme Court (Spain)
|
The Vice President of the Supreme Court is the second highest authority of the Supreme Court of Spain and its main duty is to support and replace the President as head of the Court. The vice president is appointed by the Monarch after being nominated by the General Council of the Judiciary at the proposal of the president of the council. It has a term of five years.
As the second authority and the main assistant to the president, the legislation established that the vice president is the person responsible for replacing the president in cases of vacancy, absence, illness or other legitimate reasons. The office of vice president was created in 2013 and it must not to be confused with the Vice President of the General Council of the Judiciary. The office of Vice President of the Supreme Court was created to replace the CGPJ Vice Presidency. Likewise, the president may delegate in the vice president the superior direction of the Technical Office of the Supreme Court, as well as other functions, but always for a justified reason.
The vice president, due to the fact of being it, is a born member of the Governing Chamber of the Supreme Court and it is responsible for proposing to the Chamber and to the president the adoption of those decisions aimed at guaranteeing the correct functioning of the Supreme Court, as well as ensuring the exact execution of the agreements adopted by the Governing Chamber.
== History ==
=== Origin ===
The office of Vice President of the Supreme Court was created in 2013 to replace the office of Vice President of the General Council of the Judiciary. According to the 2013 law that created it, "the existence of a Vice President is particularly important to the Supreme Court, due to that in the last thirty years the CGPJ has almost completely absorbed the time of the successive Presidents, de facto depriving the former of a unitary presidency". That is to say, the office of Vice President of the CGPJ was useless because the Council occupied most of the time of the president and the vice president had no duties. Moreover, the Supreme Court remained on numerous occasions without his head. The 5-years-term of Juanes was expected to end in January 2019 but because of the impossibility of renew the General Council of the Judiciary because of the parliament deadlock, the Plenary of the Council agreed to extend his term until October 2019, when Juanes reached the mandatory retirement age.
In October 2019, the President of the Supreme Court approved the mandatory retirement of Juanes and he temporary divided the powers of the office between two positions: the Chair of the Military Chamber, Ángel Calderón, and the magistrate and member of the CGPJ, Rafael Fernández Valverde. The first one assumed the powers related with the Supreme Court, while the second one assumed the powers related with the council.
== Appointment ==
According to the Organic Act of the Judiciary of 1985, amended in 2013 to include the figure of the vice president, the vice president will be elected in the first ordinary Plenary meeting of the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ). To be appointed vice president, the Plenary must approve the candidate chosen by the President of the Supreme Court by absolute majority. If this majority is not reached, the president must propose another candidate.
|22 October 2019
|- style="background:#e6e6aa;"
|-
|Jesús Gullón Rodríguez
|12 June 2020
|25 June 2020
|- style="background:#e6e6aa;"
|-
|Francisco Marín Castán
|25 June 2020
|8 October 2024
|-
|2º
|Dimitry Berberoff Ayuda
|8 October 2024
|Incumbent
|}
|
[
"Jesús Gullón Rodríguez",
"Madrid",
"Dimitry Berberoff Ayuda",
"General Council of the Judiciary",
"Supreme Court of Spain",
"The Most Excellent",
"Ángel Juanes Peces",
"President of the Supreme Court (Spain)",
"Monarchy of Spain",
"Ángel Calderón Cerezo",
"Luis López Guerra",
"Audiencia Nacional",
"Francisco Marín Castán",
"Coat of arms of Spain",
"Carlos Lesmes"
] |
62,102,986 |
File:Tatoeba Last Dungeon Mae no Mura no Shōnen ga Joban no Machi de Kurasu Yō na Monogatari light novel volume 1 cover.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,102,987 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/jorianvannee.nl
|
== Links ==
jorianvannee.nl resolves to 141.138.169.213
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
Nemoralis
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group sysop on some wikis
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Displayed all 6 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,102,988 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/jorianvannee.nl
|
== Links ==
jorianvannee.nl resolves to 141.138.169.213
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 5 additions out of 6 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/jorianvannee.nl
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bjorianvannee\.nl\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/jorianvannee.nl]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 13:45, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). . --COIBot (talk) 04:40, 18 January 2025 (UTC)
|
[
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/jorianvannee.nl",
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
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62,102,991 |
La Science du cœur
|
La Science du cœur is a studio album by Pierre Lapointe, released through Audiogram and Columbia Records France on October 6, 2017.
==Reception==
The album made the long list for the 2018 Polaris Music Prize, and received a Juno Award nomination for Francophone Album of the Year. It won the award for "Album of the Year – Adult Contemporary" at the 40th ADISQ Gala.
==Track listing==
"La Science du cœur" – 4:08
"Qu'il est honteux d'être humain" – 2:48
"Sais-tu vraiment qui tu es" – 3:29
"Le retour d'un amour" – 4:28
"Mon prince charmant" – 3:05
"Comme un soleil" – 2:46
"Zopiclone" – 2:56
"Alphabet" – 3:46
"Naoshima" – 2:01
"Un cœur" – 3:35
"Une lettre" – 3:21
==Charts==
|
[
"AllMusic",
"Juno Award for Francophone Album of the Year",
"Paris Tristesse",
"Pierre Lapointe",
"2018 Polaris Music Prize",
"Music Canada",
"ADISQ",
"Audiogram (label)",
"Juno Award",
"Exclaim!",
"Columbia Records"
] |
62,102,997 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/hearingsolutions.in
|
== Links ==
hearingsolutions.in resolves to [//148.66.136.54 148.66.136.54]
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Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
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Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
https resolves to [//X X]
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Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 2 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,102,999 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/hearingsolutions.in
|
== Links ==
hearingsolutions.in resolves to [//148.66.136.54 148.66.136.54]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
https resolves to [//X X]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 2 additions out of 2 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/hearingsolutions.in
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bhearingsolutions\.in\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/hearingsolutions.in]]
\bhttps\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/https]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 13:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
|
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] |
62,103,000 |
Sri Lankan cricket team in Zimbabwe in 2019–20
|
The Sri Lanka cricket team toured Zimbabwe in January 2020 to play two Test matches. It was the first tour of Zimbabwe since the International Cricket Council (ICC) lifted its suspension on Zimbabwe Cricket, due to government interference, in October 2019. Zimbabwe last played Test cricket in November 2018, in a two-match series against Bangladesh. The two teams last played a Test match against each other in July 2017, with Sri Lanka winning by four wickets. Zimbabwe have never beaten Sri Lanka in a Test match. Zimbabwe last played a home Test match in November 2017, against the West Indies.
In December 2019, Sri Lanka Cricket confirmed that the tour would take place following their tour of India. In January 2020, Zimbabwe Cricket confirmed the tour schedule. Zimbabwe Cricket also named Sean Williams as their new Test captain, replacing Hamilton Masakadza who took up the role of Director of Cricket.
Ten days before the first Test, Zimbabwe Cricket named a provisional squad of twenty-five players for the tour. On 15 January 2020, Zimbabwe named their final squad for the tour, which included five players uncapped at Test level. Three of those five cricketers made their debut in the opening day of the first Test of the series, with Brian Mudzinganyama making his Test debut on day four, as a concussion substitute. Mudzinganyama became the first cricketer to make his Test debut as a substitute. Sri Lanka won the match by ten wickets, to take a 1–0 lead in the series. The second Test finished in a draw, therefore Sri Lanka won the series.
==Squads==
Tinotenda Mutombodzi was added to Zimbabwe's squad for the second Test as a replacement to Kyle Jarvis, who was ruled out due to an injury.
==Test series==
===1st Test===
===2nd Test===
|
[
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"Niroshan Dickwella",
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"Harare",
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"Brian Mudzinganyama",
"Kusal Mendis",
"Zimbabwean cricket team in Bangladesh in 2018–19",
"Craig Ervine",
"Hamilton Masakadza",
"Lahiru Thirimanne",
"Donald Tiripano",
"Dilruwan Perera"
] |
62,103,008 |
Category:Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning faculty
|
[
"Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning",
"University of Michigan",
"academic staff",
"Ann Arbor, Michigan"
] |
|
62,103,014 |
Agnes Scott (mathematician)
|
Redirect Charlotte Scott
|
[
"Charlotte Scott"
] |
62,103,019 |
Firea
|
Firea is a Romanian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Gabriela Firea (born 1972), Romanian journalist and politician
Vasile Firea (1908–1991), Romanian racewalker
Victor Firea (1923–2007), Romanian runner
|
[
"Romanian surname",
"Vasile Firea",
"Gabriela Firea",
"Victor Firea"
] |
62,103,025 |
Flavia Seia Isaurica
|
Flavia Seia Isaurica (floruit 141) was an ancient Roman businesswoman.
She was the domina (owner) of six brick clay beds in Campania, of which she owned at least two alone, and employed at least ten foremen (officinatores). She was active in the brick industry from 115 until at least 141. She is regarded as a significant example of a successful Roman businesswoman from her day and has been the subject of research.
|
[
"clay bed",
"Campania",
"brick",
"floruit"
] |
62,103,027 |
File:Pierre Lapointe - La Science du cœur.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,103,034 |
Morten Skaug
|
Morten Skaug is a Norwegian curler and curling coach.
He is a and .
==Teams==
==Record as a coach of national teams==
|
[
"Niclas Järund",
"Norway",
"Tom Sørlundsengen",
"Morten Søgård",
"Sjur Loen",
"Oslo",
"Helge Smeby",
"Dagfinn Loen",
"2005 World Junior Curling Championships",
"coach (sport)",
"Bo Bakke",
"Eigil Ramsfjell",
"curling",
"Gunnar Meland",
"Flemming Davanger",
"Curling",
"Olav Saugstad",
"Yngve Slyngstad",
"Kristian Sørum"
] |
62,103,036 |
SVTV Network
|
Strong Voices TV (SVTV) Network is a subscription-based television network for content about the LGBT community, its allies and advocates. It features videos, movies, films, podcasts, music, and video games from members of the LGBT community. It licenses and produces genres including series, movies, documentaries, podcasts, music, reality series, short films, news, sports, live streaming events, and soon LGBT animation. Along with featuring media products produced by others, SVTV Network produces its own original series and content. The subscription-based network was started by Sheri Johnson, a full-time seventh-grade teacher and creator of the web series “StudvilleTV”.
=== Establishment ===
The SVTV Network officially launched its 'On Demand' network in the Fall of 2016 as a website and app combination.
== Flagship shows ==
=== StudvilleTV ===
Created by Sheri Johnson in 2013, the series StudvilleTV ran for four seasons on YouTube. "Based on the lives of Johnson and her three best friends [...] The series explored their lives as lesbians — dating, juggling careers and maneuvering through life together."
|
[
"reality television",
"LGBT",
"video on demand",
"List of Queer Black films",
"Private company",
"America's Next Top Model",
"YouTube"
] |
62,103,041 |
Syed Kamal Bakht
|
Syed Kamal Bakht (1930 – 15 December 2000) was a Bangladeshi politician and a Member of Parliament of Satkhira-1.
==Early life==
Syed Kamal Bakht was born in 1930, to a renowned Bengali Muslim Syed family also known as the Hashimi family in the village of Tetulia in Tala, Satkhira, Khulna District. His father, Syed Jalaluddin Hashmey, was a Speaker at the Bengal Legislative Assembly. As a part of the Muslim Student League, he took part in the Bengali language movement.
==Career==
Bakht successfully won a seat in the 1970 Pakistani general elections but did not become a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan due to the outbreak of the Bangladesh Liberation War. He played an important role as a freedom fighter. He was elected to parliament from Khulna-13 as an Awami League candidate following the 1973 Bangladeshi general elections. He lost this seat in the next election to M. Mansur Ali but regained it in 1986 when the constituency was renamed to Satkhira-1. He served in this second term until 1988, in which he lost it to his relative Syed Didar Bakht of the Jatiya Party. At the 1991 Bangladeshi general election, Bakht again lost, this time to Jamaat-e-Islami politician Ansar Ali. He managed to defeat Ali at the subsequent 1996 Bangladeshi general election.
==Death==
Bakht died of old age on 15 December 2000.
|
[
"Al-Hashimi (surname)",
"Bangladesh National Portal",
"Jatiya Party (Ershad)",
"Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies",
"Habibul Islam Habib",
"1970 Pakistani general election",
"National Assembly of Pakistan",
"Bangladesh Awami League",
"Awami League",
"Bengal Legislative Assembly",
"Bengali language movement",
"Syed Didar Bakht",
"Satkhira District",
"Jatiya Sangsad",
"Ansar Ali",
"Sayyid",
"Tala Upazila",
"Bengali Muslim",
"1991 Bangladeshi general election",
"Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami",
"Syed Jalaluddin Hashmey",
"Satkhira-1",
"Bangladesh Liberation War",
"M. Mansur Ali",
"June 1996 Bangladeshi general election",
"1973 Bangladeshi general election",
"BM Nazrul Islam",
"The Daily Ittefaq",
"Khulna Division"
] |
62,103,048 |
Senator Pryor
|
Senator Pryor may refer to:
David Pryor (born 1934), U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1979 to 1997
Luke Pryor (1820–1900), U.S. Senator from Alabama in 1880
Mark Pryor (born 1963), U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 2003 to 2015
|
[
"Luke Pryor",
"Mark Pryor",
"David Pryor"
] |
62,103,071 |
Christine Mielitz
|
Christine Mielitz (born 23 November 1949) is a German theatre and opera director.
== Life ==
Born in Chemnitz, Mielitz was the daughter of a Chemnitz concert master and therefore came into contact with music theatre at an early age. After finishing school, she studied opera directing with Götz Friedrich and Hans-Jochen Irmer at the Hochschule für Musik "Hanns Eisler" in East-Berlin from 1968 to 1972.
In the course of her studies Mielitz completed an internship with Harry Kupfer at the Dresden State Opera, which initially led to work as an assistant to Kupfers from 1973 and where she became a director from 1980. In the same year Verdi's Nabucco premiered in Wuppertal was her first own production. From 1982 she acted at the Dresdner Staatsoper as head director.
In 1989 she was engaged as a director at the Komische Oper Berlin, where she also took over as head director in 1992. From 1998 to 2002 she was artistic director of the Meiningen Court Theatre. In Meiningen she achieved a great international success with the first performance of the Der Ring des Nibelungen on four consecutive days, as Wagner always wished.
From 2002 to 2010 Mielitz was opera director of the Theater Dortmund. Since then she has worked as a guest director at the Vienna State Opera and the Dresden State Opera.
== Mises en scène ==
Dresden
Abu Said by Eberhard Eyser (1980, premiere)
Rusalka by Antonín Dvořák (1981)
Lohengrin by Richard Wagner (1983)
La Bohème by Giacomo Puccini (1983)
Don Giovanni by Mozart (1987)
Orfeo ed Euridice by Christoph Willibald Gluck (1988)
Fidelio by Beethoven (1989)
Komische Oper Berlin
Cavalleria Rusticana/Der Bajazzo by Pietro Mascagni, Ruggero Leoncavallo
Die schweigsame Frau by Richard Strauss (1990)
Rienzi by Richard Wagner (1992)
Werther by Jules Massenet (1995)
Macbeth by Giuseppe Verdi (1997)
Turandot by Giacomo Puccini (1998)
Meiningen
Lady Macbeth von Mtzensk by Shostakovich, (1999)
The Bartered Bride by Bedřich Smetana (2000)
Der Ring des Nibelungen by Richard Wagner (2001)
Dortmund
Der Ring des Nibelungen (2006 /07), Parsifal, Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Lohengrin and Der fliegende Holländer by Richard Wagner
Otello and Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi
Jenůfa by Leoš Janáček
Eugene Onegin by Tchaikowski
Wozzeck by Alban Berg
Madama Butterfly by Giacomo Puccini
Das Treffen in Telgte by Eckehard Mayer after gleichnamigen Erzählung by Günter Grass (Uraufführung)
Il trittico by Giacomo Puccini
Der junge Lord by Hans Werner Henze
Orpheus – Projekt by Christoph Willibald Gluck and Hans Werner Henze
Guest productions
Rienzi by Richard Wagner, Nationaltheater Mannheim (1986)
Lady Macbeth of Mzensk by Shostakovich, Volksoper Wien (1991)
The Bartered Bride by Bedřich Smetana, Opernhaus Zürich (1988) and Toronto (1993)
Cavalleria Rusticana/Der Bajazzo by Mascagni and Leoncavallo, Tokio and Nagoya (1994)
The Jacobin by Antonín Dvořák, Edinburgh Festival (1995)
Peter Grimes by Benjamin Britten, Wiener Staatsoper (1996)
Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi, Basel (1996)
Tosca by Giacomo Puccini, Essen (1997)
Daphne by Richard Strauss, Salzburg and Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe (1999)
Der König Kandaules by Alexander von Zemlinsky, Salzburger Festspiele (2002)
Der Freischütz by Carl Maria von Weber, Sydney Opera House (2002)
Der fliegende Holländer and Parsifal by Richard Wagner, Wiener Staatsoper (2003/04)
The Tales of Hoffmann by Jacques Offenbach, Hamburgische Staatsoper (2007)
Manon Lescaut by Giacomo Puccini, Opernhaus Bonn (2011)
Gogol by Lera Auerbach, Theater an der Wien (2011, premiere)
|
[
"Nabucco",
"La Bohème",
"Hochschule für Musik \"Hanns Eisler\"",
"Orfeo ed Euridice",
"Macbeth (Verdi)",
"Opernhaus Zürich",
"Leoš Janáček",
"Essen",
"Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District (opera)",
"Cavalleria rusticana",
"Der Freischütz",
"Volksoper Wien",
"Semperoper",
"Edinburgh Festival",
"Ruggero Leoncavallo",
"Die schweigsame Frau",
"Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg",
"Wiener Staatsoper",
"Salzburger Festspiele",
"Der fliegende Holländer",
"Nationaltheater Mannheim",
"Il trittico",
"Eckehard Mayer",
"Meiningen",
"Eugene Onegin (opera)",
"Wuppertal",
"Otello (Verdi)",
"Chemnitz",
"Madama Butterfly",
"Der König Kandaules",
"Der junge Lord",
"Sydney Opera House",
"Götz Friedrich",
"Vienna State Opera",
"Peter Grimes",
"Basel",
"Theater an der Wien",
"Parsifal",
"East-Berlin",
"Theater Dortmund",
"Tosca",
"Das Treffen in Telgte",
"Salzburg",
"The Bartered Bride",
"Turandot",
"Hamburgische Staatsoper",
"Lera Auerbach",
"Lohengrin (opera)",
"Werther",
"Harry Kupfer",
"Rigoletto",
"Jenůfa",
"Wozzeck",
"Daphne (opera)",
"Fidelio",
"The Tales of Hoffmann",
"Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe",
"Rienzi",
"The Jacobin",
"Don Giovanni",
"Rusalka (opera)",
"Manon Lescaut (Puccini)",
"Komische Oper Berlin",
"Günter Grass",
"Meiningen Court Theatre",
"Der Ring des Nibelungen"
] |
62,103,076 |
File:Strong Voices TV logo.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,103,080 |
Muhammad Danish Kaleem
|
Muhammad Danish Kaleem (born 12 November 1973) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,086 |
Naveed Alam
|
Naveed Alam (16 September 1973 – 13 July 2021) was a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
On 7 July 2021, it was reported Alam had been diagnosed with blood cancer. He sought financial support from the government for treatment. He died on 13 July 2021, aged 47, after undergoing chemotherapy at Shaukat Khanum Hospital, Lahore.
== Playing career ==
Naveed Alam mainly played as a fullback and was integral part of the Pakistan Hockey team that clinched the World Cup in Sydney in 1994. He also represented Pakistan in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.
== Post retirement ==
Naveed Alam served as the head coach of Pakistan's hockey team at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008 but soon resigned after finishing 8th - their worst-ever finish in Olympic history. He was appointed as director development and domestic by Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) in 2016 but was sacked in 2018 by PHF due to giving statements against the federation. He also coached Bangladesh Hockey team and China Hockey team. In 2020, he was banned for 10 years for forming a parallel association by Punjab Hockey Association. He was also accused of involvement in anti-hockey activities.
|
[
"Sheikhupura",
"1994 Men's Hockey World Cup",
"China men's national field hockey team",
"Pakistan at the Olympics",
"Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Centre",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey",
"chemotherapy",
"Bangladesh men's national field hockey team",
"blood cancer",
"Pakistan men's national field hockey team",
"Lahore",
"Pakistan Hockey Federation",
"field hockey",
"2008 Summer Olympics"
] |
62,103,088 |
Tanner Leissner
|
Paul Tanner Leissner (born September 17, 1995) is an American professional basketball player for Akita Northern Happinets of the B.League. He played college basketball for the New Hampshire Wildcats.
==College career==
Leissner was a four year starter for the New Hampshire Wildcats. As a freshman, he led the team with 12.3 points and 7.2 rebounds per game and was named the America East Conference Rookie of the Year and second team all-conference. He led the team in scoring and finished as the Wildcats' second-leading rebounder with 15.9 points and 7.3 rebounds per game as a sophomore and was named first team All-America East. Leissner was again named first team all-conference in his junior after averaging 17.1 points and 6.9 rebounds and helped lead New Hampshire to the semifinal of the 2017 America East men's basketball tournament. As a senior, he led the Wildcats for a fourth straight year with 18.7 points per game while also averaging 6.9 rebounds per game. He was named first team All-America East for a third consecutive season and awarded UNH Athlete of the Year. Leissner finished his collegiate career as the Wildcats' all-time leader in points (1,962), free throws attempted (675) and made (521), and minutes played (4,095) while also finishing third in rebounds with 862 in 121 games played.
==Professional career==
===Ehingen Urspring===
Leissner signed with Ehingen Urspring of ProA, the German second division, to start his professional career. He finished the ProA season with 16.3 points and 5.4 rebounds over 33 games (32 starts).
===Hapoel Be'er Sheva===
Following the end of the ProA season, Leissner signed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva B.C. of the Israeli Basketball Premier League on April 28, 2019. Leissner averaged 9.0 points, 3.4 rebounds and 2.4 assists in seven games for the team.
===MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg===
Leissner returned to Germany after signing with MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg of the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL) on August 2, 2019. He averaged 10.2 points and 4.1 rebounds per game in the Bundesliga.
===Rytas Vilnius===
On August 3, 2021, he has signed with Rytas Vilnius of the Lithuanian League.
=== EWE Baskets Oldenburg ===
On July 14, 2022, he signed with EWE Baskets Oldenburg of the German Basketball Bundesliga.
=== Palencia Baloncesto ===
On July 31, 2023, Leissner signed with Palencia Baloncesto of the Liga ACB. On November 10, he left the team.
=== Akita Northern Happinets ===
On December 1, 2023, Leissner signed with Akita Northern Happinets of the B.League. On April 9, 2024, his contract was terminated. On May 14, he re-signed with Akita Northern Happinets for 2024–25 season.
|
[
"Riesen Ludwigsburg",
"basketball",
"college basketball",
"New Hampshire Wildcats men's basketball",
"Converse, Texas",
"ProA",
"Power forward (basketball)",
"Liga ACB",
"BC Rytas",
"B.League",
"Basketball Bundesliga",
"Ehingen Urspring",
"2022 LKL Playoffs",
"Seacoast Media Group",
"Baskets Oldenburg",
"2017 America East men's basketball tournament",
"Lietuvos Krepšinio Lyga",
"Hapoel Be'er Sheva B.C.",
"The New Hampshire",
"Afyon Belediye S.K.",
"Akita Northern Happinets",
"Lietuvos krepšinio lyga",
"Rytas Vilnius",
"Judson High School",
"Basketbol Süper Ligi",
"Israeli Basketball Premier League",
"America East Conference",
"Palencia Baloncesto"
] |
62,103,090 |
Syed Didar Bakht
|
Syed Didar Bakht is a Jatiya Party (Ershad) politician in Bangladesh and a former member of parliament for Satkhira-1.
==Career==
Bakht was elected to parliament from Satkhira-1 as a Jatiya Party candidate in 1988. He served as a state minister in the cabinet of President Hussain Mohammad Ershad. He joined the Bangladesh Nationalist Party in 2000. He left the BNP, after failing to get their nomination, and joined the Liberal Democratic Party. He returned to the Jatiya Party and was appointed presidium member.
|
[
"Liberal Democratic Party (Bangladesh)",
"Jatiya Party (Ershad)",
"Hussain Mohammad Ershad",
"Satkhira-1",
"Syed Kamal Bakht"
] |
62,103,099 |
Muhammad Usman (field hockey)
|
Muhammad Usman (born 4 April 1971) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,109 |
Frederic Richard Lees
|
Frederic Richard Lees (15 March 1815 – 29 May 1897) was an English activist and writer. He was an advocate for temperance and vegetarianism.
==Life and career==
Frederic Richard Lees was born in Meanwood, near Leeds.
Lees signed the antispirits pledge in 1832 and became teetotaller in 1835. He worked as a temperance activist and authored books on the subject. In 1837, he became the Secretary for the British Association for the Promotion of Temperance (British Temperance League) and edited its journal from 1840 to 1844. Lees also edited the Truth-Seeker from 1844 to 1850, the Teetotal Topic, in 1847, and the Temperance Spectator, in 1859. He was a founding member of the United Kingdom Alliance in 1863.
Lees was a vegetarian and occasionally lectured on vegetarianism. In 1857, he won a Vegetarian Society essay competition which was republished in 1884. He became an associate member of the Society in 1874.
Lees obtained an honorary doctorate from University of Giessen for his writings against Owenism.
== Personal life and death ==
Lees married Mercy Joanna Jowett on 22 October 1838 at St Peter's Church in Leeds and they had two children; she died in 1870. In 1878, he married Sarah Barnesley (née Brooks), who died in 1889.
Lees died on 29 May 1897, in Halifax, West Yorkshire.
==Selected publications==
Owenism Dissected (1838)
An Argument on Behalf of the Primitive Diet of Man (1857)
Essays Physiological and Critical on the Principles of Temperance (1857)
National Temperance Testimonial of One Thousand Guineas to Dr. Frederic Richard Lees (1860)
An Inquiry into the Reasons and Results of the Prescription of Intoxicating Liquors in the Practice of Medicine (1866)
Textbook of Temperance (1869)
The Temperance Bible-commentary: Giving at One View, Version, Criticism, and Exposition, in Regard to All Passages of Holy Writ Bearing on 'wine' and 'strong Drink', Or Illustrating the Principles of the Temperance Reformation (1870)
The Science Temperance Text-Book (1884)
The Temperance Movement and its Workers: A Record of Social, Moral, Religious, and Political Progress (with Peter Turner Winskill, 1891)
|
[
"Temperance movement in the United Kingdom",
"teetotaller",
"Halifax, West Yorkshire",
"British Association for the Promotion of Temperance",
"University of Giessen",
"vegetarianism",
"Vegetarian Society",
"United Kingdom Alliance",
"Peter Turner Winskill",
"Vegetarianism",
"Owenism",
"Leeds",
"Meanwood"
] |
62,103,114 |
Muhammad Shafqat Malik
|
Muhammad Shafqat Malik (born 7 September 1970) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,121 |
Irfan Mahmood
|
Irfan Mahmood (born 1 September 1972) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,125 |
Claudia de Heredia
|
Claudia de Heredia Romo (born 28 August 1982) is a Mexican e-commerce entrepreneur.
==Life==
Romo was born in Mexico City. She took a degree in marketing at Tecnológico de Monterrey Campus Santa Fe and graduated in 2006. She then worked in Procter & Gamble in México until 2009.
In 2012 she, together with Jennifer Marquard and Claudio del Conde, founded Kichink. Its success was based on the relative reliability of the Mexican postal service and the average customer's perceived distrust of on-line payments.
In 2015, Google celebrated its Demo Day and Kichink was one of the 11 applications made by startups founded or co-founded by women. de Heredia represented Kichink as co-founder during the event in Silicon Valley. She had four minutes to make a pitch followed by two questions. Kichink was not the winner but it received the Game Changer Award for Innovative Entrepreneurship.
As director of marketing of Kichink, she was part of the program "Young Leaders of the Americas" where seven entrepreneurs from Latin America met over two weeks technology companies, business incubators and accelerators in Seattle.
De Heredia was also a speaker at the panel The Impact of Technology on Services Delivery: Policy Changes in 2016 during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum held in Arequipa, Peru. In 2017, Claudia de Heredia participated in the Innovating and Scaling Across Markets panel during eMERGE Americas based in Miami.
In September 2019 the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development announced seven "eTrade for Women Advocates" from the developing world. The others were Nazanin Daneshvar, Clarisse Iribagiza, Patricia Zoundi Yao, Nina Angelovska and Helianti Hilman from Indonesia. The awards were announced on the periphery of the United Nations General Assembly in New York and she was one of the five winners who were present.
|
[
"Helianti Hilman",
"Kichink",
"Nazanin Daneshvar",
"Patricia Zoundi Yao",
"Mexico City",
"Procter & Gamble",
"Jennifer Marquard",
"United Nations Conference on Trade and Development",
"Clarisse Iribagiza",
"Nina Angelovska",
"Miami",
"United Nations General Assembly",
"Claudio del Conde",
"Seattle"
] |
62,103,139 |
Ansar Ali
|
Ansar Ali (died 6 October 2020) was a Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami politician and a Jatiya Sangsad member representing the Satkhira-1 constituency.
==Career==
Ali was elected to parliament from Satkhira-1 as a Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami candidate in 1991.
|
[
"Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami",
"Dhaka",
"Syed Didar Bakht",
"Jago News 24",
"Satkhira-1",
"Syed Kamal Bakht",
"Jatiya Sangsad"
] |
62,103,143 |
File:Greater New York CSP.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,103,225 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Bad Idea (Ariana Grande song)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. RL0919 (talk) 15:20, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Bad Idea (Ariana Grande song)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
While this song did chart and received some coverage through album reviews, there is no standalone coverage about this song; therefore, it is not notable per WP:NSONGS which states that a song is "notable if they have been the subject of multiple, non-trivial published works whose sources are independent of the artist and label". It also states that "Coverage of a song in the context of an album review does not establish notability", which is exactly what is being referenced in this article. It also explicitly states "that material should be contained in the album article and an independent article about the song should not be created". This article should be redirected to its album, Thank U, Next. Billiekhalidfan (talk) 14:24, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
I vote keep per WP:GNG. I get what Billiekhalidfan is saying, but the song has charted in almost 20 countries, and the article's "background and composition" section could be expanded with other composition details and reviews, even if they come from reviews of the album as a whole. I've done a quick Google search and posted some links for consideration on the article's talk page (just a handful of many similar articles). Additionally, this article needs a "Performances" section because she performed the song during the Sweetener Tour and at both Coachella and Lollapalooza. Mention of the remix(es?) should also be added. With the addition of "Remix", "Personnel", and "Reception" sections, I could see this being a nice little article. Finally, if editors decide the song is not independently notable, please just redirect and do not delete the page entirely, because the page is a possible search term and may be expanded further at a later date, especially since there may be more coverage still since this is Grande's most recent release. ---Another Believer (Talk) 14:37, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Albums and songs-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 14:52, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep. At its core, WP:GNG (and its subject-specific variants) exist to filter out topics for which it would be impossible to write an article with substantial and verifiable information. If the only thing we can offer about a song is standard metadata like who performed it, who wrote it, who produced it, how long it is, which album it's from, etc. then we should not have an article about it (because Wikipedia is not a song database). But that's not the case here. The section, while not very long, provides some interesting (sourced) details about the song's composition. I think it would be a shame to remove this information from the encyclopedia. Also, secondary coverage is not limited to album reviews (this Rolling Stone feature that talks about the song's composition is not a review). Colin M (talk) 15:18, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
, Agreed, and there's not even a "Reception" section yet... ---Another Believer (Talk) 15:22, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: more information is being added to the article. It has received stand-alone coverage and has charted in many charts, enough to keep it. Paparazzzi (talk) 15:37, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Where is there stand-alone coverage? Billiekhalidfan (talk) 15:45, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep - charting isn’t everything, but charting on 10-15 national charts? Come on. That’s significant. And there’s a few paragraphs of content too. Not a great nomination. Nom needs to rethink their priorities at AFD. Sergecross73 msg me 16:01, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Snow keep. Obviously meets WP:GNG, and likely any bar that a song article should also meet. Gleeanon409 (talk) 09:03, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"WP:RAWDATA",
"Thank U, Next",
"Bad Idea (Ariana Grande song)",
"WP:NSONGS"
] |
62,103,227 |
Subbaiah Anjaparavanda
|
Subbaiah Anjaparavanda (born 8 August 1970) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,233 |
Sanjeev Kumar (field hockey)
|
Sanjeev Kumar (born 4 October 1969) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey at the 1994 Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey",
"Field hockey at the Summer Olympics",
"Asian Games",
"field hockey"
] |
62,103,243 |
Sabu Varkey
|
Sabu Varkey (born 21 January 1971) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1998 Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"Kerala",
"Field hockey",
"1994 Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 1998 Asian Games",
"field hockey",
"Field Hockey"
] |
62,103,244 |
James W. Milliken
|
James Wheelock Milliken (May 26, 1848 – June 19, 1908) was an American businessman and politician.
Milliken was born in Denmark, Maine and was raised in Saco, Maine. He worked in a dry goods store in Saco, Maine. In 1868, Milliken moved to Traverse City, Michigan and continued to own a dry goods store in Traverse City. Milliken served in the Michigan Senate from 1897 to 1900 and was a Republican. Milliken died from a stroke on a New York Central train while going to New York City. His son James T. Milliken and his grandson William Milliken also served in the Michigan Senate, with William Milliken going on to become Michigan's longest-serving governor.
|
[
"Michigan Senate",
"New York City",
"William Milliken",
"Republican Party (United States)",
"Saco, Maine",
"James T. Milliken",
"Traverse City, Michigan",
"Denmark, Maine"
] |
62,103,251 |
Rahul Singh (field hockey)
|
Rahul Singh (born 5 January 1975) is an Indian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,103,262 |
Alloysius Edwards
|
Alloysius Edwards (born 21 December 1968) is an Indian field hockey player from Hyderabad. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"Field hockey",
"Hyderabad",
"field hockey"
] |
62,103,268 |
Anil Aldrin
|
Anil Alexander Aldrin (born 22 August 1971) is a former Indian hockey player who played for the India national field hockey team. His family hailed from Kerala in a place named Murukanpuzha in Trivandrum. He played as a defender for India from 1992 to 1999 and captained the country during his last years in 1999. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics at Atlanta. He also played in the Asian Games in 1994 and 1998, winning the gold in his second appearance at Bangkok, and he represented India in Champions Trophy in 1995 and 1996 at home in Madras. He also played two World Cups in 1994 in Sydney and under coach Vasudevan Baskaran in 1998 at Utrecht, the Netherlands. He serves as the Sports Director at Vidyashilp Academy, Bengaluru, India.
==Career==
Aldrin had his schooling at St. Joseph's Boys High School in Bangalore and started his hockey career after joining the Sports Authority of India hostel for boys under well-known coach P. A. Rafael. He also completed his B.Com from St. Joseph's College, Bangalore. Anil Aldrin and Sandeep Somesh were in the class of 1988 at St. Joseph's school, along with Indian cricket player Rahul Dravid, who also played hockey in his school days. Later, in his playing days, Aldrin was compared to Rahul Dravid and was called as the `Wall of Indian hockey' for his defending skills. Other hockey players who went on to play for India, like Sabu Varkey, Sandeep Somesh and Ravi Nayakkar, were his teammates in the hostel under the same coach. In the 1990s he was recruited by Indian Airlines which later became known as Air India, one of the top domestic outfits in India. In 2022, Aldrin secured a formidable leadership role at the prestigious Vidyashilp Academy, training and leading over 2,500 young athletes.
|
[
"Rahul Dravid",
"1998 Asian Games",
"Vasudevan Baskaran",
"Field hockey at the 1994 Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"1996 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey",
"India men's national field hockey team",
"Vidyashilp Academy",
"Field hockey at the Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 1998 Asian Games",
"Asian Games",
"Field Hockey",
"St Joseph's Boys' High School, Bangalore"
] |
62,103,279 |
Marie Geistinger
|
Marie Charlotte Cäcilie Geistinger (1836–1903) was an Austrian actress and operatic soprano, known as the "Queen of Operetta". She frequently appeared in works by Jacques Offenbach, Johann Strauss II and Franz von Suppé. She achieved particular acclaim for performing Rosalinda in the première of Die Fledermaus at the Theater an der Wien in 1874. In 1881, her debut at the Thalia Theatre in New York was well received.
==Early life==
Born in Graz on 26 July 1836, Geistinger was the daughter of the Russian court actors Nikolaus Geistinger, an opera singer, and his wife Charlotte, who was the granddaughter of the Brunswick court actor Karl Grassmann. Well educated, she was given a sound introduction to music by K. M. Wolf in Vienna. From 1844, she appeared in children's roles in Graz. She made her official début in August 1850 at the Max-Schaiger Theatre in Munich. Offenbach commented that he had never seen a better performance of the role and that she was the greatest operetta performer he had seen. In 1880, she returned to Vienna's Theater an der Wien for a short period, successfully performing in Offenbach's German versions of Madame Favart (in the title role) and La fille du tambour-major as Stella. She also appeared as Lotti Grießmeyer in Ludwig Held's Die Näherin.
On an invitation from the American theatre manager and impresario Gustav Amberg, she moved to New York, where she made her début at the Thalia Theater on 5 January 1881, receiving the same enthusiastic reception as years earlier in Vienna. She performed in the United States in theatres across the country for the next three years, appearing in all her most successful roles in operetta and drama. After she moved to the Germania Theatre in 1883, her Austrian rival Josefine Gallmeyer was engaged by the Thalia, but poor health soon forced her to return to Europe. Gallmeyer had excelled in an extensive repertoire, playing leading parts in Charles Lecocq's La petite mademoiselle, Offenbach's La Vie parisienne, von Suppé's Leichte Kavallerie, Zehn Mädchen und kein Mann, die Afrikareise and Donna Juanita, Carl Millöcker's Der Bettelstudent, Das verwunschene Schloss and Apajune, der Wassermann, and Hervé's Lili.
On her return to Europe, Geistinger played in Austrian and German theatres, appearing in her most successful roles. After retiring in 1889, financial difficulties forced her to return to the United States for three additional seasons in 1891, 1896 and 1899. She last appeared on the stage in 1900.
==Later life==
Geistinger spent her later years in Klagenfurt, where she died on 29 September 1903. Her obituary in the Neue Freie Presse referred to her as the most important operetta singer of her times. She is buried in a tomb of honour in Vienna's Central Cemetery.
|
[
"Heinrich Laube",
"Geneviève de Brabant",
"Leipzig",
"Wallack's Theatre",
"Cagliostro in Wien",
"La fille du tambour-major",
"Madame l'archiduc",
"Madame Favart",
"Charles Lecocq",
"Leichte Kavallerie",
"Munich",
"Mary Stuart (Schiller play)",
"Riga",
"Much Ado about Nothing",
"Barbe-bleue (opera)",
"La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein",
"Klagenfurt",
"Friedrich Schiller",
"Ludwig Anzengruber",
"Die Fledermaus",
"Der Karneval in Rom",
"Franz von Suppé",
"Alois Berla",
"Theater an der Wien",
"Friedrich Strampfer",
"La Vie parisienne (operetta)",
"Carl Millöcker",
"Johann Strauss II",
"Neue Freie Presse",
"Sappho",
"Hamburg",
"Vienna Central Cemetery",
"Berlin",
"Bowery Theatre",
"New York City",
"Die schöne Galathee",
"Indigo und die vierzig Räuber",
"Jacques Offenbach",
"Fantasio (opera)",
"Franz Grillparzer",
"Graz",
"Maximilian Steiner",
"operatic soprano",
"Josefine Gallmeyer",
"La Belle Hélène",
"Shakespeare",
"Der Bettelstudent",
"Wiener Stadttheater",
"Hervé (composer)",
"Theater in der Josefstadt"
] |
62,103,292 |
2022 UEFA European Under-19 Championship
|
The 2022 UEFA European Under-19 Championship (also known as UEFA Under-19 Euro 2022) was the 19th edition of the UEFA European Under-19 Championship (69th edition if the Under-18 and Junior eras are included), the annual international youth football championship organised by UEFA for the men's under-19 national teams of Europe. Slovakia hosted the tournament between 18 June and 1 July 2022. A total of eight teams played in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2003 eligible to participate.
Same as previous editions held in even-numbered years, the tournament acted as the UEFA qualifiers for the FIFA U-20 World Cup. The top five teams of the tournament qualified for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Argentina as the UEFA representatives.
Spain were the defending champions, having won the last tournament held in 2019, with the 2020 and 2021 editions cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe and the title was not awarded. They were not able to defend the title after failing to qualify for the competition.
==Host selection==
The timeline of host selection was as follows:
11 January 2019: bidding procedure launched
28 February 2019: deadline to express interest
27 March 2019: Announcement by UEFA that declaration of interest were received from 17 member associations to host one of the UEFA national team youth final tournaments (UEFA European Under-19 Championship, UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, UEFA European Under-17 Championship, UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship) in 2021 and 2022 (although it was not specified which association were interested in which tournament)
28 June 2019: Submission of bid dossiers
24 September 2019: Selection of successful host associations by the UEFA Executive Committee at its meeting in Ljubljana
For the UEFA European Under-19 Championship final tournaments of 2021 and 2022, Romania and Slovakia were selected as hosts respectively. The qualifying competition would have been played in four rounds over a two-year period from autumn 2020 to spring 2022, with teams divided into three leagues, and promotion and relegation between leagues after each round similar to the UEFA Nations League. However, on 17 June 2020, UEFA announced that the introduction of the new format had been postponed to the 2023 edition due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, and qualification for the 2022 edition would use the previous format involving two rounds only.
A total of 54 (out of 55) UEFA nations entered the competition, and with the hosts Slovakia qualifying automatically, the other 53 teams will compete in the qualifying competition, which consisted of two rounds: the Qualifying round, which took place in autumn 2021, and the Elite round, which took place in spring 2022, to determine the remaining seven spots in the final tournament. The draw for the qualifying round was held on 9 December 2020, 10:30 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.
===Qualified teams===
The following teams qualified for the final tournament.
Note: All appearance statistics include only U-19 era (since 2002).
==Venues==
==Match officials==
The following officials were appointed for the final tournament:
Referees
Nathan Verboomen
Morten Krogh
Goga Kikacheishvili
Manfredas Lukjančukas
Matthew De Gabriele
António Nobre
Assistant referees
Mathias Hillaert
Deniz Sokolov
Steffen Beck Bramsen
Turkka Joonas Valjakka
Davit Gabisonia
Edgaras Bučinskas
Luke Portelli
Pedro Martins
Fourth officials
Gergő Bogár
Adam Ladebäck
== Squads ==
==Group stage==
The final tournament schedule was announced on 28 April 2022.
The group winners and runners-up advanced to the semi-finals and qualify for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
===Group A===
----
----
===Group B===
----
----
==Knockout stage==
===Bracket===
===FIFA U-20 World Cup play-off===
Winners qualified for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
===Semi-finals===
----
===Final===
==Goalscorers==
== Team of the tournament==
The UEFA Technical Observer team announced the team of the tournament.
==Qualified teams for FIFA U-20 World Cup==
The following five teams from UEFA qualified for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Argentina.
1 Bold indicates champions for that year. Italic indicates hosts for that year.
==Sponsors==
Adidas
Slovnaft
DEMI Šport
Oxyworld
Lucka
|
[
"1997 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Goga Kikacheishvili",
"Carney Chukwuemeka",
"2010 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"UEFA Nations League",
"Jarell Quansah",
"1999 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Ilay Madmon",
"Oscar Gloukh",
"2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Malta Football Association",
"UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Dane Scarlett",
"Alfie Devine",
"UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Národný Atletický Štadión",
"FIFA",
"Alex Scott (footballer, born 2003)",
"1977 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"2022 UEFA European Under-19 Championship qualification",
"2020 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Gergő Bogár",
"MOL Aréna",
"Matthew De Gabriele",
"UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"NTC Senec",
"Nathan Verboomen",
"1993 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"2017 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Aaron Ramsey (footballer, born 2003)",
"Manfredas Lukjančukas",
"Harvey Vale",
"Mestský štadión Žiar nad Hronom",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Europe",
"Tai Abed",
"UTC+01:00",
"El Yam Kancepolsky",
"DAC Aréna",
"association football",
"Senec, Slovakia",
"Argentina",
"Ahmed Salman",
"Samuel Kopásek",
"Alan Virginius",
"2006 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Marko Lazetić",
"2001 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Fabio Miretti",
"2003 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Liam Delap",
"UEFA",
"Anton Malatinský Stadium",
"2003 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Isaak Touré",
"Stav Lemkin",
"Slovakia",
"Banská Bystrica",
"2019 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Taïryk Arconte",
"2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Štadión SNP",
"Dunajská Streda",
"Danish Football Association",
"Callum Doyle",
"2023 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"2005 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Cristian Volpato",
"Lithuanian Football Federation",
"Petar Ratkov",
"2013 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Tommaso Baldanzi",
"Spain national under-19 football team",
"Stefan Leković",
"1991 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Lukas Wallner",
"2002 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Luca Andronache",
"1981 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"UTC+02:00",
"Adis Jasic",
"Trnava",
"Matthew Cox (footballer)",
"Ariel Lugasi",
"Ange-Yoan Bonny",
"Central European Time",
"Žiar nad Hronom",
"Leopold Querfeld",
"National team appearances in the FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Georgian Football Federation",
"Daniel Jebbison",
"Portuguese Football Federation",
"2011 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Martin Adeline",
"2011 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"2009 FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Adam Griger",
"2018 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship",
"Florent Da Silva",
"FIFA U-20 World Cup",
"Adidas",
"Loum Tchaouna",
"Royal Belgian Football Association",
"Yusuf Demir",
"2021 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Morten Krogh (referee)",
"2016 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Nyon",
"António Nobre (referee)",
"Central European Summer Time",
"Giuseppe Ambrosino",
"Andrei Coubiș",
"1987 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Brayann Pereira",
"2014 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"2005 UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Ljubljana",
"1985 FIFA World Youth Championship",
"Adam Ladebäck",
"Slovnaft"
] |
62,103,299 |
Category:2022 in youth association football
|
[] |
|
62,103,304 |
Governor Clement
|
Governor Clement may refer to:
Frank G. Clement (1920–1969), 41st Governor of Tennessee
Percival W. Clement (1846–1927), 57th Governor of Vermont
|
[
"Governor Clements (disambiguation)",
"Percival W. Clement",
"Frank G. Clement"
] |
62,103,305 |
Governor Clements
|
Governor Clements may refer to:
Bill Clements (1917–2011), 42nd & 44th Governor of Texas
Earle Clements (1896–1985), 47th Governor of Kentucky
|
[
"Governor Clement (disambiguation)",
"Orion Clemens",
"Bill Clements",
"Earle Clements"
] |
62,103,312 |
Wikipedia:Copyright problems/2019 October 19
|
==== 19 October 2019 ====
Draft:Cognitive Behavioral Therapy techniques ([ history] · [ last edit] · rewrite) from https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01065/full. Jonatan Svensson Glad (talk) 14:38, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Article deleted for a reason other than copyright concerns. MER-C 10:56, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"Draft talk:Cognitive Behavioral Therapy techniques/Temp"
] |
62,103,318 |
Fort Victoria, Cape Coast
|
Fort Victoria is a structure in Cape Coast, Ghana. It was initially known as 'Phipps Tower', in honour of its initial constructor English Governor Phipps. Its name was changed later to Fort Victoria in honor of Queen Victoria. Along with other nearby forts and castles, Fort Victoria was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979 because of its European colonial significance.
== History ==
It is situated in the western part of the Cape Coast Township and was built in 1821 on the site of an earlier fort named after its builder, Governor James Phipps.
Fort Victoria served as an outlook post for signaling purposes and to fend off attacks.
It can be viewed from Fort William because of their close proximity.
== Current state ==
The fort is in good condition and has been maintained as a national monument. It is one of the tourist sites in Ghana.
Pupils from Primary to JHS 3 GH¢ 0.50
SHS Students GH¢ 1.00
Tertiary Students with ID GH¢ 2.00
Ghanaian Adults GH¢ 5.00
Foreign Children USD 2.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
Foreign Students with ID USD 7.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
Adult Foreigners USD 10.00 or its equivalent in Ghana cedis
*Entrance fees were reviewed in February 2013
|
[
"Fort William Lighthouse",
"Queen Victoria",
"Ghana",
"monument",
"Cape Coast",
"List of castles in Ghana",
"UNESCO",
"James Phipps of Cape Coast Castle",
"World Heritage List"
] |
62,103,326 |
Niclas Thiede
|
Niclas Thiede (born 14 April 1999) is a German professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for club SSV Ulm on loan from VfL Bochum.
==Club career==
Thiede made his professional debut for SC Freiburg in the Bundesliga on 19 October 2019, coming on as a substitute for the injured Alexander Schwolow in the away match against Union Berlin.
On 27 June 2022, Thiede moved to SC Verl on a permanent basis.
On 31 July 2024, Thiede joined SSV Ulm on loan.
|
[
"SC Freiburg II",
"Rot-Weiss Essen",
"Germany national under-18 football team",
"Germany national under-20 football team",
"Association football",
"Alexander Schwolow",
"SSV Ulm 1846",
"SC Freiburg",
"Bundesliga",
"1. FC Union Berlin",
"VfL Bochum",
"Borussia Dortmund Youth Sector",
"FC Iserlohn 46/49",
"Goalkeeper (association football)",
"Germany national under-19 football team",
"Hagen",
"SC Verl"
] |
62,103,334 |
2012 in African music
|
The following is a list of events and releases that have happened or are expected to happen in 2012 in African music.
==Events==
date unknown
Johnny Clegg receives the Order of Ikhamanga, Silver - the highest honour a citizen can receive in South Africa - as part of the National Orders ceremony. The award is presented by President Jacob Zuma.
Tats Nkonzo gains recognition for his musical contributions to the eNews Channel's satirical news show Late Nite News with Loyiso Gola
==Albums released in 2012==
==Classical==
==Musical films==
Zambezia (animation), with music by Bruce Retief
==Deaths==
January 17 – Mohamed Rouicha, 61, Moroccan folk singer
February 18 – Mohammed Wardi, 79, Sudanese singer and songwriter
April 8 – George Wilberforce Kakoma, 89, Ugandan musician, composer of the Ugandan national anthem
November 30 – Kélétigui Diabaté, 81, Malian musician
|
[
"Youssou N'Dour",
"January 17",
"November 30",
"Hugh Masekela",
"Oh Uganda, Land of Beauty",
"Zambezia (film)",
"Kélétigui Diabaté",
"Johnny Clegg",
"April 8",
"Mohamed Rouicha",
"George Wilberforce Kakoma",
"February 18",
"Ike Moriz",
"Mohammed Wardi",
"Loyiso Gola",
"2012 in music",
"Tats Nkonzo",
"Order of Ikhamanga",
"Discogs",
"Jabulani (Hugh Masekela album)"
] |
62,103,354 |
Kitty Party (film)
|
Kitty Party is a 2019 Indian comedy film directed by Nav Bajwa. The film stars Kainaat Arora and Gurpreet Ghuggi in lead. Kitty Party tells the story about a group of middle class housewives in Chandigarh who form a kitty, and end up developing an unexpected friendship.
==Plot==
This is a story of 5 middle class housewives who live their life in a regular way. They start off their day with cooking, handling their kids, sending their husbands to work, going for yoga classes, etc. But all the 5 women are best friends and they all enjoy their day with each other. Once in a week they all have kitty party where they play tombola and put a committee in which they all put some money and any one of them can take the total amount. But the change comes when one of them puts a picture on Facebook. She was approached by a woman staying in Goa.
She told them to put 5 lacs each in committee and in return they will get 10 lacs in 30 days. All the women agreed to that but after 1 month, they could not find her. They all decided to go to Goa to find her and to get their money back. Will they get their money back? What will be the desi plan they will follow? What will they say to their husbands to go out of station? Every scene will be related to all Punjabi ladies all over the world. Every lady represent different Punjabi language of different parts of Punjab they all will have different characters which will create a lot of comedy.
==Cast==
Nav Bajwa as Sunny
Gurpreet Ghuggi as Cheema Saab
Kainaat Arora as Jasmin Kaur
Jaswinder Bhalla as Gurjeet Singh Bhalla
Upasna Singh as Kulwant Kaur
Harby Sangha as Shamsher Dhillion
Anita Devgan as Mrs Dhillion
Rana Ranbir as Kuku Pardhan
|
[
"comedy",
"Gurpreet Ghuggi",
"Nav Bajwa",
"Chandigarh",
"Jaswinder Bhalla",
"Upasna Singh",
"Kainaat Arora",
"Anita Devgan",
"Punjabi language",
"Rana Ranbir",
"India",
"Harby Sangha"
] |
62,103,363 |
List of telescopes of Australia
|
The list below is split between telescopes located in Australia, and telescopes sponsored by Australia such as a space telescope or foreign installation.
Australia can access the Southern skies, which was a popular trend in the 20th century (many telescope had been built for the northern hemisphere). The third largest optical telescope in the world in 1974 was Anglo-Australian Telescope, one of the really large telescopes of that time and built in Australia. There are several radio telescopes also, and Sydney Observatory has taken observations for over a century.
One of the largest telescopes of the 19th century was the Great Melbourne Telescope, one of the last big metal mirror reflecting telescopes before the silver-on-glass designs came to predominate; this was purchased with money from an Australian Gold boom.
==In country optical telescopes==
Anglo-Australian Telescope (3.9m, 1974-)
Automated Patrol Telescope (5m, 1989-2008)
Faulkes Telescope South (2m, 2004-)
SkyMapper (1.35m)
UTas H127 (1.27m)
Great Melbourne Telescope (48 inches/ ~1.22m, 1868)
Siding Spring 2.3 m Telescope (2.3 m)
Sydney Observatory instruments
Mt. Kent Observatory - Shared Skies (0.7 m)
Penrith Observatory (0.6m)
Perth-Lowell Telescope (0.6m)
Mt. Kent Observatory - Shared Skies (0.5m)
Uppsala Southern Schmidt Telescope (0.5m)
==Radio telescopes==
|
[
"Automated Patrol Telescope",
"List of largest optical telescopes in the North America",
"Faulkes Telescope South",
"Sydney Observatory",
"Siding Spring 2.3 m Telescope",
"Lists of telescopes",
"UTas H127",
"SkyMapper",
"List of largest optical telescopes in the British Isles",
"Uppsala Southern Schmidt Telescope",
"Anglo-Australian Telescope",
"Perth-Lowell Telescope",
"Mt. Kent Observatory - Shared Skies",
"Penrith Observatory",
"Great Melbourne Telescope"
] |
62,103,377 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Manu Ríos
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. Tone 19:25, 2 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Manu Ríos===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
No evidence of any notability. Refs are very lightweight and appear to be based on press releases (identical images in more than one source). No evidence of notability. Fails WP:GNG Velella Velella Talk 14:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Actors and filmmakers-related deletion discussions. Velella Velella Talk 14:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Spain-related deletion discussions. Velella Velella Talk 14:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Ok, I already edited with some comprehensive details about him.Telex80 (talk) 06:31, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, North America1000 16:47, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Film-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 21:37, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Bands and musicians-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 21:37, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fashion-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 21:38, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Television-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 21:38, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Puff piece masquerading as a Wikipedia article.TH1980 (talk) 03:59, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"Manu Ríos",
"WP:GNG"
] |
62,103,380 |
Ulugqat Township
|
{{Infobox settlement
|name = Ulugqat
|native_name =
|other_name = Wulukeqiati
|nickname =
|settlement_type = Township
|motto =
|image_skyline =
|imagesize =
|image_caption =
|image_map =
|mapsize =
|map_caption =
|image_map1 =
|mapsize1 =
|pushpin_map = China Xinjiang Southern
|pushpin_label_position = right
|pushpin_mapsize =
|pushpin_map_caption = Location of the township
|subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = People's Republic of China
|subdivision_type1 = Autonomous region
|subdivision_name1 = Xinjiang
|subdivision_type2 = Prefecture
|subdivision_name2 = Kizilsu
|subdivision_type3 =County
|subdivision_name3 =Ulugqat (Wuqia)
|government_footnotes =
|government_type =
|leader_title =
|leader_name =
|established_title =
|established_date =
|area_magnitude =
|unit_pref = metric
|area_footnotes =
|population_total =4,430
|population_density_km2 =
|demographics_type2 = Ethnic groups
|demographics2_title1 = Major ethnic groups
|demographics2_info1 = Kyrgyz (ئۇلۇغچات يېزىسى ) is a township of Ulugqat County (Wuqia) in Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China. Located in the middle north of the county, the township covers an area of 3,430 square kilometers with a population of 4,430 (as of 2017). It has 4 villages under its jurisdiction. Its seat is at Korgan Village ().
Ulugqat Township is located 92 kilometers west of the county seat Wuqia Town. It is adjacent to Kiziloy Township in the east, Oksalur Township in the south and Jigin Township in the west, and borders with the Kyrgyz Republic in the north with a boundary line of 118 kilometers. There are 9 mountain passes connecting Kyrgyzstan.
==History==
Ulugqat Township is commonly known as old Wuqia. Ulugqat Township was once the seat of Ulugqat branch county () established from Shufu County in 1913. Ulugqat branch county was changed to Ulugqat Division () in 1929 and the county of Wuqia was established from Ulugqat Division in 1938 and the county seat was transferred to Wuqia Town.
Ulugqat was part of the 2nd district of Wuqia County in 1950. Ulugqat Commune () was formed in 1958. The commune was renamed to Dongfeng Commune () in 1968 and restored the former name in 1980. The commune was reorganized as a township in 1984.
==Subdivisions==
The township has 4 villages and 8 unincorporated villages under its jurisdiction.
Qizilkowruk Village (Kezilekulucun) (, , )
Qorghan Village (Ku'ergancun) (, , )
Chongterek Village (Qiongtierekecun) (, , )
Saryqbai Village (Sarekebayicun) (, , )
==Demographics==
, the population of Ulugqat was Kyrgyz.
==Economy==
Ulugqat's economy is primarily based on animal husbandry.
Protected animals in Ulugqat include argali, goitered gazelle, and snowcock.
|
[
"Counties of China",
"Ulugqat County",
"unincorporated village",
"Xinhua News Agency",
"Oksalur",
"goitered gazelle",
"National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency",
"Townships of China",
"Kyrgyz people",
"Shufu County",
"China Standard Time",
"People's Daily",
"argali",
"Kyrgyz language",
"Kyrgyzstan",
"snowcock",
"Autonomous regions of China",
"List of ethnic groups in China",
"Jigin",
"Wuqia Town",
"Xinjiang",
"Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture",
"mountain pass",
"Villages of China",
"zh:新疆人民出版社",
"Kiziloy",
"Google Cache",
"Ürümqi",
"Prefectures of China",
"Internet Archive",
"Beijing Time"
] |
62,103,384 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Prabal Kumar Basu (2nd nomination)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was Speedy close as the move back to mainspace was an end-run around the previous AfD that just closed a few days ago. Please do not move the draft back into mainspace without addressing the issues raised at the previous AfD. -- RoySmith (talk) 15:53, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Prabal Kumar Basu===
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
was draftified by discussion on Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Prabal Kumar Basu and then was immediately moved back into the mainspace without any changes 10 days later. no refs added since the so still fails WP:POET as per the deletion discussion. It seems the creator of this article has no intention of improving the article, just pushing it back into the mainspace. CodeLyokobuzz 14:48, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of India-related deletion discussions. CodeLyokobuzz 14:48, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of People-related deletion discussions. CodeLyokobuzz 14:57, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Authors-related deletion discussions. CodeLyokobuzz 14:57, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Poetry-related deletion discussions. CodeLyokobuzz 14:57, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
pinging RoySmith as the closer of the last deletion discussion. CodeLyokobuzz 14:52, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"Prabal Kumar Basu",
"WP:POET"
] |
62,103,400 |
File:Tondo-Cavite.jpg
|
==Summary==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,103,404 |
Garalbari
|
Garalbari is a gram panchayat area located in the Jalpaiguri district of West-Bengal, India. Geographically, Garalbari is located in the latitude of 26.448391N and longitude of 88.6434308E. Garalbari is a panchayat village in Jalpaiguri Block of Jalpaiguri District of West Bengal State, India. It is located 13 km away towards the South from the district headquarters Jalpaiguri and 12 km away from Jalpaiguri city. The postal index number of Garalbari is 735132.
==Etymology==
It was heard that the word 'Garal bari' (গড়াল বাড়ি) comes from the word ‘Garh’ trees. Garh tree belongs to the bush or Copsewood family. In the 1900s A.D.the undivided Jalpaiguri district has a big area. At that time the Panchagarh part(Rangpur district) of Bangladesh (then East Pakistan) lies within the Western Duars District. To facilitate the better collection of revenue of the Western Duars district, there was a landmark of widespread Garh trees. There was a lonely seclude resident behind the Garh bushes which was supposed to be the bottom part of this Sadar subdivision. This secluded home behind the Garh trees giving birth to the name of Garal bari ('Garer aral bari' to Garalbari).
==Geography==
Garalbari is located in the southern part of the district has sharing international borders with Bangladesh in the south, Kharia gram panchayat in the north, Berubari gram panchayat in the east and Bahadur gram panchayat in the west respectively. The native language of Garalbari is Bengali, English, Hindi, and Urdu. Most of the villagers speak Bengali, and Hindi for communication. The total geographical area of the Panchayet village is 4521.02 hectares. The Net Area Sown of Garalbari is 2706 hectares under different types of land use, out of this 290 hectares are the total irrigated land area, 2415 hectares are the Un-irrigated land area, 145 hectares are the Canals irrigated area, 108 hectares are the Tubewell irrigated area and 35 are the Tank or lakes irrigated area. Garalbari is well known for potato cultivation, tea plantation and rubber plantation (Rubber Bagan).
==Climate==
Garalbari is part of the monsoon climate zone of South-Eastern Asia. The temperature lies within the range of 10 °C to 36 °C and usually January is the coldest month, July is the wettest and December is the driest month of the year.
==Topography==
The entire topography of Garalbari is equipped with three small rivers (namely Panga river, Jamuna river, and Dagaichand river) and a good number of big ponds (Harirbari dighi, kalayani dighi, suvachani dighi, hatpukuri dighi, jhaljhali dighi etc.).
==Demographics==
According to the 2011 Census, Garalbari has a total population of 28,791 peoples. There are about 6,435 households in Garalbari Panchayat village. Female Population of Garalbari village is 49.0%. The village literacy rate is 61.7% and the Female Literacy rate is 27.6%.
==Education==
There are 25 primary schools, 5 secondary schools, and 1 higher secondary school (Garal Bari High School) in Garalbari. There is no degree college, medical college and engineering college at Garalbari. There are 2 primary health sub-center and 12 Non-formal Training Centre (NFTC) in Garalbari.
==Transport & Communication==
Garalbari is well connected to the district's main city, Jalpaiguri which is 11 km away from Garalbari. A good number of buses and auto are daily run on this Garalbari-Jalpaiguri route.
==Services==
Garalbari has a large number of internet cafes, sports fields, Common Services Centre (CSC) and one Public library (Garalbari gram panchayat library). The whole region is well benefited by tap water provided by Public Health Engeeenier (PHE), Jalpaiguri division. There are also bank facilities of State Bank of India Customer Service Point (CSP) and Uttarbanga Kshetriya Gramin Bank (UBKGB). Sovarhat and Kamperhat are the two big local rural market which is satisfying to the day-to-day needs of the people of Garalbari.
|
[
"Garal Bari High School",
"State Bank of India",
"Jalpaiguri",
"Rangpur district",
"Berubari, West Bengal",
"Bangladesh"
] |
62,103,407 |
2022 UEFA European Under-17 Championship
|
The 2022 UEFA European Under-17 Championship (also known as UEFA Under-17 Euro 2022) was the 19th UEFA European Under-17 Championship (38th edition if the Under-16 era is also included), the annual international youth football championship organised by UEFA for the men's under-17 national teams of Europe. Israel was hosting the tournament. A total of 16 teams played in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2005 eligible to participate.
Netherlands, having won the title in 2018 and 2019, were the two-times title holders, since the 2020 and 2021 editions were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe and the title was not awarded.
==Host selection==
The timeline of host selection was as follows:
11 January 2019: bidding procedure launched
28 February 2019: deadline to express interest
27 March 2019: Announcement by UEFA that declaration of interest were received from 17 member associations to host one of the UEFA national team youth final tournaments (UEFA European Under-19 Championship, UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, UEFA European Under-17 Championship, UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship) in 2021 and 2022 (although it was not specified which association were interested in which tournament)
28 June 2019: Submission of bid dossiers
24 September 2019: Selection of successful host associations by the UEFA Executive Committee at its meeting in Ljubljana
For the UEFA European Under-17 Championship final tournaments of 2021 and 2022, Cyprus and Israel were selected as hosts respectively.
===Qualified teams===
The following teams qualified for the final tournament.
Note: All appearance statistics include only U-17 era (since 2002).
Notes
1 The best seven runners-up among all eight elite round groups qualified for the final tournament.
2 Two as Serbia and Montenegro and six as Serbia
3 As Serbia and Montenegro
===Final draw===
The winner and runners-up of Group 6 were not known at the time of the draw.
==Venues==
The tournament is hosted in five venues:
==Match officials==
The following officials were appointed for the final tournament:
Referees
Henrik Nalbandyan
Christian-Petru Ciochirca
Dario Bel
Willy Delajod
Helgi Mikael Jónasson
Igor Stojčevski
Andrei Florin Chivulete
Tom Owen
Assistant referees
Khachatur Hovhannisyan
Maximilian Weiß
Miroslav Maksimov
Luka Pušić
Matěj Vlček
Sander Saga
Erwan Finjean
Gylfi Már Sigurðsson
Daniel Vasilevski
Isaak Elias Skjeseth Bashevkin
Alexandru Cerei
Johnathon Bryant
Fourth officials
Juxhin Xhaja
David Fuxman
Snir Levi
Jasmin Šabotić
== Squads ==
==Group stage==
The final tournament schedule was announced on 31 March 2022.
The group winners and runners-up advance to the quarter-finals.
===Group A===
----
----
===Group B===
----
----
===Group C===
----
----
===Group D===
----
----
==Knockout stage==
The schedule for the knockout stage was released on 26 April 2022.
===Bracket===
===Quarter-finals===
The quarter-finals took place on 25 May and 26 May.
===Semi-finals===
The semi-finals took place on 29 May.
===Final===
The final took place on 1 June.
==Goalscorers==
|
[
"Tom Saettel",
"Markus Jensen",
"UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Tommaso Guercio",
"UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Lod Municipal Stadium",
"Iker Bravo",
"João Gonçalves (footballer, born 2005)",
"Netanya",
"2014 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Austrian Football Association",
"UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"El-Chadaille Bitshiabu",
"Israel",
"Dean Huijsen",
"Henrik Nalbandyan",
"Axel Gueguin",
"Israel Summer Time",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Europe",
"Rodrigo Ribeiro (footballer, born 2005)",
"Penalty shoot-out (association football)",
"Kevin Bruno",
"Jovan Šljivić",
"David Fuxman",
"Noah Sahsah",
"2018 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"2012 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Willy Delajod",
"Netherlands national under-17 football team",
"Dário Essugo",
"Isaac Babadi",
"2006 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Tim van den Heuvel",
"João Veloso",
"Jorne Spileers",
"Alexis Kabamba",
"Stefan Traykov (footballer)",
"Stanis Idumbo-Muzambo",
"Noah Nartey",
"Luca Lipani",
"Afonso Moreira (footballer)",
"Football Federation of Macedonia",
"Saël Kumbedi",
"José Rodrigues (footballer)",
"Jovan Mijatović",
"2003 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"UEFA",
"Ness Ziona",
"Désiré Doué",
"Jardell Kanga",
"2009 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"2020 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Croatian Football Federation",
"Naim Byar",
"Football Association of Iceland",
"Football Association of Wales",
"Dawid Drachal",
"UTC+03:00",
"Yoram Boerhout",
"Emil Højlund",
"Vojin Serafimović",
"2019 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"2007 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Tom Bischof",
"2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Can Uzun",
"Maurice Krattenmacher",
"2008 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Helgi Mikael Jónasson",
"Laurin Ulrich",
"Ramat Gan Stadium",
"2016 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Magnus Mackenzie",
"Francesco Pio Esposito",
"Valentin Atangana Edoa",
"Ramat Gan",
"Dženan Pejčinović",
"2022 UEFA European Under-17 Championship qualification",
"David Mella",
"Lod",
"Dario Bel",
"Manuel Mendonça",
"2015 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Jasmin Šabotić",
"Jaden Fernando Slory",
"Ivan Lima",
"2002 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Elias Hansborg-Sørensen",
"Mateja Radonjić",
"Yan Yusopove",
"Zoumana Diallo",
"Jan-Carlo Simić",
"Ness Ziona Stadium",
"Rishon LeZion",
"French Football Federation",
"Christian-Petru Ciochirca",
"Warren Zaïre-Emery",
"Mike Kleijn",
"Juxhin Xhaja",
"Antoni Milambo",
"Mathys Tel",
"Tom Owen (referee)",
"Netanya Stadium",
"Paul Wanner",
"Oualid Agougil",
"Nelson Weiper",
"Aleksandar Stanković (footballer, born 2005)",
"Haberfeld Stadium",
"Luis Gomes (footballer)",
"Snir Levi",
"Andrei Florin Chivulete",
"Dani Rodríguez (footballer, born 2005)",
"UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship",
"2005 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Jason van Duiven",
"Javier Boñar",
"Romanian Football Federation",
"Sidney Raebiger",
"Football Federation of Armenia",
"Paulo Fritschi",
"Alessandro Bolzan",
"Leonardo de Oliveira",
"Ussumane Djaló",
"Nyon",
"2021 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Karem Zoabi",
"Rory Wilson",
"2023 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Arijon Ibrahimović",
"Philipp Schulz",
"Association football",
"Chemsdine Talbi",
"2013 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Jovan Milošević",
"Gabriel Misehouy",
"Alexander Simmelhack",
"Jaden Slory",
"Martin Georgiev",
"Oliwier Sławiński",
"Goal difference",
"Ljubljana",
"João Muniz",
"2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Ayman Aiki",
"2011 UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"Luca Di Maggio",
"Igor Stojčevski"
] |
62,103,408 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/reinventarlasorganizacioneswiki.com
|
== Links ==
reinventarlasorganizacioneswiki.com resolves to [//198.136.56.162 198.136.56.162]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
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Link would be caught by rule \breinventarlasorganizacioneswiki\.com\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:Spam blacklist (diff - )).
Link is globally blacklisted by \breinventarlasorganizacioneswiki\.com\b
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 60 additions.
|
[
"m:Spam blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,410 |
Patsy & Loretta
|
Patsy & Loretta is a 2019 biographical drama television film directed by Callie Khouri. The screenplay by Angelina Burnett is based on the friendship between country singers Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn. The cast is led by Megan Hilty, Jessie Mueller, Janine Turner, and Kyle Schmid.
The film first aired on Lifetime on October 19, 2019. The film was nominated for Best Movie at the 10th Critics' Choice Television Awards. Megan Hilty and Jessie Mueller were also both nominated for Best Actress in a TV Movie.
==Plot==
Country singers Patsy Cline (Megan Hilty) and Loretta Lynn (Jessie Mueller) meet when the former was already a well known star. The film starts in 1957, showing the two singers in their separate lives each with their own families.
They meet in 1961 after Patsy was hospitalized due to a serious automobile accident. Already a star, Patsy helped Loretta, who was just starting in her career, giving advice on contracts and even gave her tips on costumes and makeup. They develop a friendship, until the fatal airplane crash in 1963.
Loretta is seen several years later in performance with the "ghost" of Patsy.
==Cast==
==Production==
The film was shot in Nashville, Tennessee. The executive producer, Neil Meron, had also worked with Hilty on the TV series Smash in 2012-13. Co-producers were Loretta Lynn's daughter Patsy Lynn Russell and Patsy Cline's daughter Julie Fudge on behalf of Patsy Cline's Estate. Megan Hilty and Jessie Mueller were cast in the lead roles.
==Reception==
Matt Roush wrote that the film is a "...brisk, sweet, touching and, naturally, tuneful tribute to female friendship... Megan Hilty ... gives a wonderfully robust performance as the outspoken and driven Patsy... It's inspiring and terrifically enjoyable watching Patsy, a force of musical nature, take the less worldly Loretta under her wing.... Still, the movie can be a bit sketchy as it races through their professional and personal lives."
|
[
"Jan Howard",
"television film",
"Neil Meron",
"June Carter Cash",
"Teddy Wilburn",
"Callie Khouri",
"Kyle Schmid",
"Jane McNeill",
"Loretta Lynn",
"Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Movie/Miniseries",
"Megan Hilty",
"Justice Leak",
"Doyle Wilburn",
"Lifetime (TV channel)",
"Wynn Everett",
"Janette Davis",
"Oliver Lynn",
"10th Critics' Choice Television Awards",
"Jessie Mueller",
"Joe Tippett",
"Janine Turner",
"Smash (TV series)",
"Drama (film and television)",
"Country music",
"Patsy Cline",
"Lifetime (TV network)",
"Biographical film",
"Billy Slaughter",
"Charlie Dick",
"Sony Pictures Television",
"Dottie West"
] |
62,103,412 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/cheapcups2019.com
|
== Links ==
cheapcups2019.com resolves to [//104.27.185.54 104.27.185.54]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,419 |
Category:KatieJane Garside albums
|
[] |
|
62,103,421 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/boesch-web.ch
|
== Links ==
boesch-web.ch resolves to [//188.40.220.106 188.40.220.106]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 1 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,474 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/hotrodders.com
|
== Links ==
hotrodders.com resolves to [//104.16.248.51 104.16.248.51]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \bhotrodders\.com\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist (diff - )).
Link would be caught by rule \bhotrodders\.com\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist (diff - )).
Link is blacklisted by \bhotrodders\.com\b on [//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist en.wikipedia.org]
== Users ==
Trekphiler
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group reviewer on some wikis
== Additions ==
Displayed all 86 additions.
|
[
"en:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot",
"m:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist"
] |
62,103,476 |
Category:Daisy Chainsaw albums
|
[] |
|
62,103,486 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/uklarp.org
|
== Links ==
uklarp.org resolves to [//69.163.225.246 69.163.225.246]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,493 |
Walter Kim
|
Walter Kim is a Korean American evangelical pastor and, since January 2020, has been president of the National Association of Evangelicals.
== Biography ==
A child to immigrant parents, Kim completed a B.A. in philosophy and history at Northwestern University, M.Div. at Regent College, and Ph.D. in Near Eastern languages and civilizations at Harvard University in 2007. He is a licensed minister in the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference.
Kim pastored for 15 years at Park Street Church in Boston and four years at Trinity Presbyterian Church in Charlottesville. Since 2013, he has been a member of the board of the National Association of Evangelicals and, in October 2019, was elected as the next president of the organization, commencing January 2020. Kim succeeded Leith Anderson as the first person of color to be president of the evangelical organization.
|
[
"Harvard University",
"Charlottesville, Virginia",
"Leith Anderson",
"person of color",
"Regent College",
"evangelical",
"Korean American",
"National Association of Evangelicals",
"Northwestern University",
"Conservative Congregational Christian Conference",
"Park Street Church",
"Boston"
] |
62,103,494 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/url.vancl.eu
|
== Links ==
url.vancl.eu resolves to [//77.78.90.200 77.78.90.200]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,500 |
Anisul Islam Mondal
|
Anisul Islam Mondal (born 25 August 1966) is a Jatiya Party (Ershad) politician and a former Jatiya Sangsad member representing the Rangpur-2 constituency.
==Career==
Mondal was elected to parliament from Rangpur-2 as a Jatiya Party candidate in 2008.
|
[
"Rangpur-2",
"Abul Kalam Md. Ahasanul Hoque Chowdhury",
"Jatiya Party (Ershad)",
"Jatiya Sangsad",
"Mohammad Ali Sarkar"
] |
62,103,507 |
Au chien qui fume
|
Au chien qui fume is a traditional French restaurant located in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, France. It is listed as a Historic Monument.
==Location==
The restaurant is located at 33 Rue du Pont-Neuf, close to the Métro stations Louvre - Rivoli (Line 1) and Les Halles (Line 4).
==History==
The Rue du Pont-Neuf was built in the second half of the 19th century, as well as the building at No. 33. A café was opened on the ground floor.
==Description==
In the front window, four signs show smoking dogs and extensive text. The inner room features wooden counters adorned with dog heads.
|
[
"Paris",
"Rue du Pont-Neuf, Paris",
"Louvre - Rivoli (Paris Métro)",
"Les Halles (Paris Métro)",
"1st arrondissement of Paris",
"Paris Métro Line 4",
"France",
"Monument historique",
"Paris Métro Line 1",
"French restaurant",
"List of monuments historiques in Paris"
] |
62,103,510 |
Category:Regent College
|
[] |
|
62,103,513 |
Category:Songs written by Edd Holloway
|
[
"Edd Holloway"
] |
|
62,103,518 |
Category:Academic staff of Regent College
|
[] |
|
62,103,520 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/advocacy.collegeboard.org
|
== Links ==
advocacy.collegeboard.org resolves to [//104.119.8.186 104.119.8.186]
advocacy.collegeboard.org is hosted on collegeboard.org
collegeboard.org resolves to [//209.48.35.174 209.48.35.174]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
This lousy T-shirt
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
== Additions ==
Displayed all 5 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,103,522 |
Huma Nawab
|
Huma Nawab is a Pakistani actress. She is one of the most popular actresses of her time and one of the most successful Pakistani TV actresses of the 1980s and 1990s. She played major roles in TV dramas Chand Grehan, Aahat, Nijaat, Hawain, and Silsila.
==Early life==
Nawab was born in 1969 in Islamabad, Pakistan. Huma returned to Pakistan briefly in 2012, again in 2014, and permanently in 2015.
==Personal life==
In 2012, she came back to Pakistan, fulfilling her mother's wish who wanted to be buried next to her husband after being diagnosed with blood cancer. Huma is unmarried and lives in Islamabad. Huma's mother Fatima Nawab was also an actress.
|-
|rowspan="2"|1994
| Hum Kahan Ke Daana Thay
| Nazi
| PTV
|-
| Memon Seth Ki Doosri Shadi
| Farzana
| PTV
|-
|rowspan="2"|1995
| Chand Grehan
| Shehrbano
| PTV
|-
|1997
| Hawain
| Saima
| PTV
|-
|2000
| Tum Hi To Ho
| Zaib
| PTV
|-
|rowspan="3"|2014
| Susraal Mera
| Salman's mother
| Hum TV
|-
| Zid
| Omer's mother
| Hum TV
|-
| Jeena Dushwar Sahi
| Hammad's mother
| PTV
|-
|rowspan="5"|2015
| Inteha
| Shehryar's mother
| Express Entertainment
|-
| Kitna Satatay Ho
| Hammad's Khala
| Hum TV
|-
| Mere Ajnabi
| Aayan's mother
| ARY Digital
|-
| Googly Mohalla
| Bhaya coach
| PTV
|-
| Aik Thi Misaal
| Asma
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="6"|2016
| Socha Na Tha
| Amna
| ARY Zindagi
|-
| Mere Humnawa
| Nasra
| ARY Digital
|-
| Kuch Na Kaho
| Nayyara
| Hum TV
|-
| Tum Milay
| Farida
| ARY Digital
|-
| Bin Roye
| Safeer's mother
| Hum TV
|-
| Judai
| Saman
| ARY Digital
|-
|rowspan="6"|2017
| Thori Si Wafa
| Seemal's mother
| Hum TV
|-
| Tumhare Hain
| Kiran
| ARY Digital
|-
| Mera Aangan
| Shaista
| ARY Digital
|-
| Shikwa Nahin Kissi Se
| Ammi
| A-Plus
|-
| Begangi
| Mahi's mother
| A-Plus
|-
| Yaqeen Ka Safar
| Mahjabeen
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="2"|2018
| Tum Mujrim Ho
| Komal's mother
| BOL Entertainment
|-
| Deedan
| Gul Makai
| A-Plus
|-
|rowspan="5"|2019
| Kaif-e-Baharan
| Farah
| Geo Entertainment
|-
| Surkh Chandni
| Safina
| ARY Digital
|-
| Muthi Bhar Chahat
| Eman's mother
| Express Entertainment
|-
| Haqeeqat
| Saira's mother
| A-Plus
|-
| Mein Na Janoo
| Farah
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="2"|2020
| Rockstar
| Maryam
| TV One
|-
| Dil Ruba
| Junaid's mother
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="3"|2021
| Aks
| Imran's mother
| LTN Family
|-
| Hum Kahan Ke Sachay Thay
| Saleha
| Hum TV
|-
| Parizaad
| Shehla
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="7"|2022
| Aitebaar
| Bilal's mother
| Hum TV
|-
| Beqadar
| Farzana
| Hum TV
|-
| Rasm-e-Ulfat
| Arsam's mother
| PTV
|-
| Dil Bhatkay
| Zain's mother
| TV One
|-
| Pehchaan
| Bano
| Hum TV
|-
| Ilzaam
| Mrs. Haleem
| Aan TV
|-
| Bakhtawar
| Shareefa
| Hum TV
|-
| rowspan="4"|2023
| Ahsaas
| Nazi's mother
| Express Entertainment
|-
| Ghao
| Hina's mother
| PTV
|-
| Samjhota
| Azra
| ARY Digital
|-
| Kahain Kis Se
| Zubaida
| Hum TV
|-
|rowspan="3"|2024
| Pagal Khana
| Noor's mother
|rowspan="2"|Green Entertainment
|-
| Raaz
| Shoaib's mother
|-
| BOL Kahani
| Shahzad's mother
| BOL Network
|}
===Telefilm===
===Film===
==Awards and nominations==
|
[
"ARY Digital",
"Haqeeqat (2019 TV series)",
"Mein Na Janoo",
"Farar",
"Hum TV",
"Dhoop Mein Sawan",
"Samjhota",
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"Yaqeen Ka Safar",
"Mah e Mir",
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"Chand Grehan",
"Nijaat",
"Deedan",
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"Nayab (film)",
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"Ayaz Naik",
"Bin Roye",
"Hawain",
"Surkh Chandni",
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"Aik Thi Misaal",
"Zid (TV series)",
"Kitna Satatay Ho",
"Pakistan Television Corporation",
"Bin Roye (TV series)",
"PTV Awards",
"Aitebaar",
"Pehchaan (2022 TV series)",
"A-Plus TV",
"BOL Network",
"Silsila",
"Geo Entertainment",
"Parizaad"
] |
62,103,527 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/coochbeharrajbari.in
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62,103,528 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/coochbeharrajbari.in
|
== Links ==
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\bcoochbeharrajbari\.in\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/coochbeharrajbari.in]]
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See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 15:10, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 03:37, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 09:53, 30 November 2019 (UTC)
Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 19:23, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
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62,103,532 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/populertoday.info
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62,103,534 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Danielle Younge-Ullman
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. Additional reference discovered. (non-admin closure) scope_creepTalk 18:18, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Danielle Younge-Ullman===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non-notable writer. Fails WP:AUTHOR, WP:BIO and WP:SIGCOV. scope_creepTalk 15:12, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep I'm the author of the article and here's why it should be kept: She does not fail WP:AUTHOR as one of her books was a finalist for the 2017 Governor General Literary Award and therefore qualifies under criteria #3. She's also a notable person, as independant reliable sources give her coverage. I can dig through newspapers and add more, which was part of the reason I originally had the article in draft space (as I planned to improve it). I was busy, and do other stuff on-wiki in the meantime. Yesterday, the draft was deleted under G13 as abandoned, and I submitted a WP:REFUND request to contunie working on it. I moved it to mainspace to prevent it from being deleted again under G13 if I got busy again, as I'm a grade 12 student and I might not be as active on Wikipedia for periods of time because of my obligations as a student. Clovermoss (talk) 15:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
No wikiprojects have been notified of this discussion. Would it be okay if WP:Canada and WP:Women in Red were notified of this AfD? Clovermoss (talk) 15:55, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Hi Of course!!. The process will add all interested groups in shortly anyway. Hope that helps.scope_creepTalk 16:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Authors-related deletion discussions. – Muboshgu (talk) 16:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Women-related deletion discussions. – Muboshgu (talk) 16:24, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Canada-related deletion discussions. – Muboshgu (talk) 16:24, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep – The author was interviewed by CBC, Canada's national public broadcaster for radio and TV The author also was interviewed by the Toronto Star (Canada's highest-circulation newspaper) for a story about the house she lives in [https://www.thestar.com/life/health_wellness/2010/08/05/semi_stories_what_life_is_like_when_you_share_a_wall.html. Her book, Everything Beautiful is Not Ruined won the White Pine Award, a national Canadian award. The book was reviewed by The Globe and Mail [https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/books-and-media/book-reviews/review-new-ya-books-from-kelly-jensen-jennifer-latham-and-danielle-younge-ullman/article34516395/, Teen Vogue and others. CBC named it one of the best Canadian YA/children's books of 2017 [https://www.cbc.ca/books/the-best-canadian-young-adult-and-children-s-books-of-2017-1.4454386 and one of 150 books on "The great Canadian reading list" Another book, Falling Under was reviewed by Good Housekeeping [https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/life/relationships/a20613/bad-boy-sex-why-does-wrong-f/. She passes the WP:NBIO/WP:NAUTHOR bar for me. – Levivich 17:26, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment I notice one of her books has been reviewed by the Guardian, and the Telegraph. So that is a sold keep. Withdrawn. scope_creepTalk' 18:17, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:NAUTHOR",
"Governor General's Awards",
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"Good Housekeeping",
"White Pine Award",
"WP:NBIO",
"Toronto Star",
"WP:BIO",
"WP:Canada",
"WP:AUTHOR"
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62,103,535 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/populertoday.info
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== Links ==
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== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 15:12, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 17:34, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
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62,103,546 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/karantinamassacre.blogspot.ae
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62,103,554 |
Category:Television series created by Jeri Taylor
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[] |
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62,103,557 |
Category:1856 disestablishments in the Russian Empire
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[] |
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62,103,558 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Second Battle of Ras al-Ayn (2019)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was no consensus. There was no consensus after two-relists, with a leaning to Keep; there was a vocal minority view that it should be smerged into larger campaign WP articles, however this was felt premature; can be re-visited again. (non-admin closure) Britishfinance (talk) 19:57, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Second Battle of Ras al-Ayn (2019)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Not enough material to be a separate article from 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria KasimMejia (talk) 15:15, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep (from the article creator) For two reasons (1) This article is substantial, and it is an ongoing operation, so its not yet complete (2) Wikipedia is an encyclopedia - The article 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria is already substantial. Putting this information into it would make it too big. Apart from that, this is an important battle that has been going on for about 9 days, involving the the SDF, Turkey, and the TFSA militia, and probably about 200 people have died so far, so its a battle certainly worthy of its own distinct article. It is currently an indicator of the SDF's will to put up a fight against Turkey. Certainly Battles of a lot smaller size have their own articles. Its really the *pivotal* main battle for this operation. Thanks! Deathlibrarian (talk) 01:57, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment Everything included in this article is already included in the main article 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria. The background section is an entire copy of it. There are at most 4-5 sentences in this article that is included in this article but not the main one. They can simply be moved to the main article. Everything seems double written here. KasimMejia (talk) 06:17, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment I have added more detail, so there is more detail in the article, and there was in fact before. Even if it was, that doesn't mean the battle isn't notable to get it's own article, which IMHO, it is. I've seen battles way smaller than this with less significance, that were regarded as notable enough to have their own page. Deathlibrarian (talk) 07:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
The half of the article is still a copy of the main one. The background section is an exact copy. A lot of stuff in the operation section is also double written in the two articles. Making this article very un-user friendly. Who ever reads the main one and moves into this is just reading what they read over there again. KasimMejia (talk) 09:41, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment "The background is an exact copy"? Its not, I wrote it from scratch and I hadn't even read the other one. Compare them, they are different. Deathlibrarian (talk) 11:39, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Per the nomination this isn't significant or notable enough to warrant a separate article. Ras al-Ayn is like half of the offensive and the main article isn't long enough to split off half of its content. Lightspecs (talk) 23:57, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep. This is a legitimate sub-page of 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria. The military campaign by Turkey just has began. There will be a lot more content on the parent page. The battle should be only very briefly mentioned on page Ras al-Ayn, with a reference to this page. My very best wishes (talk) 01:48, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment This battle is already over as SDF evacuated the town. It lasted 11 days, there is no material regarding the battle inside the town to have a separate article. The background section and most of the information about the battle is an exact copy of the main article. The article has over a dozen missing citations. KasimMejia (talk) 11:03, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
This depends on the coverage in RS (it seems to be significant) and if the battle represents a separate well-defined event according to RS. All battles end, and it should not be within the town. My very best wishes (talk) 15:26, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep - While this is only one out of many battles during Turkey's offensive, no specific battle pages for this operation have been made on Wikipedia. This was also so far the biggest resistance the SDF made against the Turkish military and the TFSA right on the Syrian-Turkish border; and it was covered in RS too. If that's not notable enough, then I don't know what is. SkoraPobeda (talk) 18:54, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Military-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:04, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Turkey-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:04, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Syria-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:04, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment, the article 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria that some editors may suggest is not long enough to split is presently around 8,000 words, from WP:SPLIT - "A page of about 30 to 50 kilobytes (kB) of readable prose, which roughly corresponds to 6,000 to 10,000 words, takes between 30 and 40 minutes to read at average speed, which is right on the limit of the average concentration span of 40 to 50 minutes.", so suggesting that the length of the Turkish offensive article is not an issue may be slightly misleading. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:18, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
delete For now, the battle seems to be over and at this time its to close to events to determine lasting importance.Slatersteven (talk) 09:30, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep The events outlined in the article are important enough to merit a separate article. David O. Johnson (talk) 21:53, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep Ras al-Ayn was a flashpoint and was besieged for many days during the offensive which included urban warfare, so the specific fight for it is significant enough. I believe there's enough independent information in this article's current state to warrant its existence. Helps keeps the main article as de-congested as possible as well. RopeTricks (talk) 16:33, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, 78.26 (spin me / revolutions) 14:44, 28 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete/Merge to 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria per WP:REDUNDANTFORK. Much of the content in this article is a rehash of material from the parent article, and what little isn't can easily be merged into the main article (which isn't that large). Frankly this event is so central to the parent article that it seems strange to have the information split. Further Wikipedia:Too soon should apply here as well. We just don't have enough distance to get a good editorial perspective.4meter4 (talk) 14:51, 28 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment I don't know why people keep saying that the article for the offensive isn't that large and this should be simply put back into it. The article for the offensive is now quite huge - its 12,000 words. That is over the limitations for a standard Wikipedia article, which according to WP:SPLIT should 8000 to 10,000 words.Deathlibrarian (talk) 01:33, 8 November 2019 (UTC)
Keep This helps avoid an overwhelmingly large article, and much like the original Hasakah campaign in 2012 and 2013 this warrants a similar level of attention and importance, albeit the article could use some serious improvements.Takinginterest01 (talk) 04:23, 30 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete/Merge per reasons given by 4meter4. There are already 200 articles in the Syrian War Campaing box in 10 separte subcategories, whats to point to create and keep low important articles that are of the same topic.Mr.User200 (talk) 12:40, 4 November 2019 (UTC)
Relisting comment: Still no real consensus here with most logical outcome being a merge to 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria, however, still a material desire to keep this article given current ongoing events; try one last re-list.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Britishfinance (talk) 20:12, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
Comment The original listing was 5 Keeps to 2 deletes, so how can that translate into a delete?. Deathlibrarian (talk) 20:46, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
Comment. By after the 1st re-list it swung more in favour of Delete/Merge, with some strong arguments in that regard. Hopefully, the re-list will get to a clearer consensus. I find that some these types of articles (e.g. current event inside a larger current event), can get kept for a period, but then eventually with the passing of time, merged/written-down into the main article to avoid FORKS and excessive detail. Britishfinance (talk) 11:15, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
Comment If you are talking about voting consensus, there was 5keeps to 2 deletes initially. The re-list saw 2 keeps to 1 delete. Overall, that is *not* an indication that editors are voting to delete the article. Taking into account all votes so far in the three listings, there are 7 keeps and 4 deletes. Deathlibrarian (talk) 01:38, 7 November 2019 (UTC)
AFD is not a majority vote. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:46, 8 November 2019 (UTC)
Keep for now WP:NORUSH There is enough no trivial source information in this article's current state to warrant its existence. Wm335td (talk) 21:37, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
Delete/Merge (Nominator) None of the sources explicitly state details about the battle that took place in this town. All the cited sources in the article are related to the larger 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria which already has a detailed article. The article for example has no access to the number of casualties specific to the clashes in this town so there is a clear lack of material. One reading both articles reads absolute no new information by reading this article since its pretty much copied material. KasimMejia (talk) 09:48, 8 November 2019 (UTC)
Comment KasimMejia you just voted here, but you also are the nominator for deletion! Deathlibrarian (talk) 02:10, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
I did nominate it, that doesn't mean I'm not allowed to vote, I had not voted previously. KasimMejia (talk) 06:56, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
(1) This is the article on the battle, you are talking about the article on the operation - they are different - there are plenty of details about this battle, and the investigation into the use of white phosphorus that aren't in the article about the ongoing operation. (2) They shouldn't be put into the main article, because at 12,000 words, it is way too big WP:Split(3) There is a lot of information on the battle, there are probably at least 30 articles that discuss the battle, many actually mentioned the town's name in the battle...the article itself has 49 references (4) There are no articles that mention the casualties, that's because the casualties aren't known - not because they didn't happen. At least 30 or 40 civilians died alone without the numbers of soldiers, but as the battle went on for 10 days, the soldiers killed could be in the hundreds. However, because the number of deaths isn't know, it doesn't mean they didn't happen. Deathlibrarian (talk) 02:20, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
Splitting this battle from the article just copies most of the material from the original article. The two major towns in the OP, Tall Abyad and Ras Al Ayn are both written in the article. Tal Abyad battle lasted 3 days, this one lasted 10 days. Both were very brief clashes and can be written under the same article. The biggest reason I'm opposed to this article is because everything is written twice. It's tiring to read the same thing in two different articles. I've learned no new information about this 10 day battle by reading this articles, then I would while reading the Operation article. KasimMejia (talk) 06:56, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
- At this point, the article for the operation is too big, there is extra detail in the battle article that shouldn't be put into the Operation article. If anything, the detail on the battle should be removed from the operation article (now at 12,000 words) to make it shorter to fit within WP:Split. You say this is a brief battle, it went for 11 days! What is your definition of brief?? Deathlibrarian (talk) 07:30, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
KasimMejia I don't understand, why would you say "None of the sources explicitly state details about the battle that took place in this town" - have you read them? They just about all do, and in fact, look at the titles, many of them mention the town in the title of the article. Deathlibrarian (talk) 07:34, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
Yes I know the article is at 12.000 words. That doesn't mean this article is not a copy of the OP article. This article has an infobox and the information written are already included in the main article. Why do you want to keep this article so much anyway? I know you started it but you shouldn't take ownership of it, see WP:OWN. If you want to write information about this battle you can write it into the OP article, you copied most of the stuff into here. As for a brief battle yes 11 days is short. Battle of Aleppo lasted 4 years for example. Battle of Al-Bab 3 months. This is 11 days, very short. KasimMejia (talk) 07:37, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
KasimMejia I'm not sure if you have written a lot of articles on Battles, but Waterloo, Austerlitz and Agincourt all took place on one day. So arguing that this battle "only" took 11 days and it should therefore be deleted, by itself isn't a valid argument for deletion. I've already stated the need for this as a standalone battle article compared to the operation article, and I believe we are just going in a circular argument, so I'm not going to re-state it. Clearly you believe what you do and that won't be changing any time soon. Thank you for the discussion. Deathlibrarian (talk) 13:47, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
This being 11 days is the least of my argument and you should know it by now after 10 comments. I think I've made my point clear at this point and will be referring you to WP:JUSTDROPIT. KasimMejia (talk) 13:55, 9 November 2019 (UTC)
CommentThis article has now been listed for a total of 23 days, and its been relisted three times. Could an admin please make a call on this article, one way or the other? Thank you, cheers. Deathlibrarian (talk) 20:14, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
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62,103,561 |
Marcus Niebuhr Tod
|
Marcus Niebuhr Tod, OBE, FBA (1878–1974) was a British historian and epigraphist. He was a fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, from 1903 to 1947, and Reader in Greek Epigraphy at the University of Oxford from 1927 to 1947.
== Early life, education and the British School at Athens ==
Born in Highgate on 24 November 1878, Tod's father was a Scottish tea merchant; his mother was the daughter of the Prussian courtier Marcus von Niebuhr, and the granddaughter of the German-Danish historian Barthold Georg Niebuhr. Tod was educated at St John's College, Oxford, as a scholar, taking a first-class BA in classics in 1901.
After graduating, Tod spent four years as a senior student at the British School at Athens, supported by a Craven scholarship from the University of Oxford and a further scholarship from his old college.
== Academic career and research ==
Tod was elected to a fellowship at Oriel College, Oxford, in 1903 and took up teaching when his studentships ended in 1905. From 1907, he lectured on Greek epigraphy in the university and was promoted to a readership twenty years later. During the First World War, he worked for the Ministry of Labour and then for most of the period between 1915 and early 1919 in Salonika as an interpreter and officer in the Intelligence Corps (being appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his service). Tod returned to teaching (which he enjoyed) and between 1934 and 1945 he was vice-provost at Oriel College.
While at the British School in Athens, Tod became interested in Spartan epigraphy, and also carried out investigations in Laconia. These led to several articles on the topics and he worked with Alan Wace to produce a catalogue of the Spartan Museum in 1906. In 1912, he won the Conington Prize at Oxford for his essay "Greek International Arbitration" which was published in 1913. He wrote a chapter for the fifth volume of The Cambridge Ancient History (1927) and three of his lectures delivered at University College London were published as Sidelights on Greek History (1933). In 1933 and 1948, he published a two-volume work, Greek Historical Inscriptions.
Tod retired from his fellowship and readership at Oxford in 1947, but was elected to honorary fellowships at St John's and Oriel. He was also an honorary member of staff at the University of Birmingham. He received honorary doctorates from Trinity College Dublin, the University of Edinburgh, the University of Birmingham and the University of Oxford. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1929. He died on 21 February 1974.
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