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62,104,282
Governor Ammons
Governor Ammons may refer to: Elias M. Ammons (1860–1925), 19th Governor of Colorado Teller Ammons (1895–1972), 28th Governor of Colorado, son of Elias M. Ammons.
[ "Elias M. Ammons", "Teller Ammons" ]
62,104,284
Flip It Like Disick
Flip It Like Disick is an American reality television series that aired on the E! cable network. The series debuted on August 4, 2019, and consisted of eight episodes. It followed Scott Disick and his team as they renovated luxury homes in the greater Los Angeles area. Disick's team is made up of his best friend and business partner Benny Luciano, realtor Kozet Luciano (Benny's wife), Disick's assistant Lindsay Diamond, contractor Miki Mor, and interior designer and former pop-singer Willa Ford. The first season had numerous guest stars, including Steve Aoki, Kris Jenner, and Sofia Richie. The completely renovated house was initially listed for more than double the price for which they purchased it. As of April 2020, the house had not sold. Purchased for $3.235 million in April 2018 by Disick and his team, the house finally sold for $5.6 million in November 2020. ==Episodes==
[ "Willa Ford", "reality television", "Los Angeles", "Steve Aoki", "Kris Jenner", "Reality television", "Scott Disick", "Keeping Up with the Kardashians", "Sofia Richie", "Benny Luciano", "Ryan Seacrest Productions", "Las Vegas", "Showbuzzdaily.com", "E!" ]
62,104,289
File:Jane Olivor - Chasing Rainbows Cover.jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,104,290
Calvin Fernandez
Calvin Fernandez (born 18 November 1974) is a Malaysian 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" ]
62,104,295
Hamdan Hamzah
Hamdan Hamzah (born 2 February 1968) is a Malaysian 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" ]
62,104,330
File:The World's On Fire cover.jpg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,104,336
Template:Did you know nominations/Hezi Shai
[ "Palestinian prisoners of Israel", "Wikipedia talk:Did you know", "Jibril Agreement", "{{TALKPAGENAME}}", "Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}", "Hezi Shai" ]
62,104,340
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/wmbf.pl
== Links == wmbf.pl resolves to 85.128.196.124 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 5 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,104,342
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Wake up with Danielle Dithurbide
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 redirect to Danielle Dithurbide. (non-admin closure) Natg 19 (talk) 06:36, 27 October 2019 (UTC) ===:Wake up with Danielle Dithurbide=== – (View AfDView log Stats) () Non-notable TV show. Just 57 mentions on Google News. Bbarmadillo (talk) 17:30, 19 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Television-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 17:49, 19 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mexico-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:44, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Women-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 04:44, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Doesn't help that the title has been translated, either; typically, TV show titles are left untranslated. More searches are likely with the Spanish title Despierta con Danielle Dithurbide. The host is notable—this is the morning show on Mexico's highest-rated TV network!—but this article is a disaster. We'd be better served with a translation of Danielle Dithurbide for enwiki than this article. Delete. Raymie (t • c) 22:58, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Weak Delete. While the article is certainly on a notable topic and would easily pass WP:SIGCOV and WP:GNG, the article as written contains only confusion (including a weird title) and nothing of value. If someone steps forward to clean it up and make a decent stub and the article is moved to Despierta con Danielle Dithurbide than we could reasonably keep this article.4meter4 (talk) 12:41, 26 October 2019 (UTC) Redirect to Danielle Dithurbide, without prejudice against recreation in the future if somebody can do better than this. As a television program airing on national networks, this would certainly clear WP:TVSHOW if it were properly sourced — but the only references shown here are its schedule pages on the self-published websites of its own networks, which are not independent or notability-making sources. TV shows do not get into Wikipedia just because their own self-created web presence metaverifies its own existence; they get into Wikipedia when they are the subject of media coverage in sources other than themselves. But since we now have a BLP of the host as per Raymie's suggestion, redirecting the show to her article is a viable stopgap solution until somebody's willing and able to get the show written and sourced properly. Bearcat (talk) 20:46, 26 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", "Danielle Dithurbide", "WP:SIGCOV", "WP:SELFPUB", "WP:TVSHOW", "Wake up with Danielle Dithurbide" ]
62,104,343
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/wmbf.pl
== Links == wmbf.pl resolves to 85.128.196.124 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 5 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/wmbf.pl == Entry == Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist: \bwmbf\.pl\b                 # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/wmbf.pl]] == Discussion == See COIBot report for more details. New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 17:30, 19 October 2019 (UTC) Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). . --COIBot (talk) 09:43, 18 January 2025 (UTC)
[ "MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log", "</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/wmbf.pl", "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,104,357
John Mullings Aldridge
John Mullings Aldridge (1843 – 18 March 1920) was an Anglican priest during the second half of the nineteenth century and the first decades of the 20th. Aldridge was born in Devizes, Wiltshire, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. He was ordained deacon and priest in 1870. After a curacy in Kilcummin, he held incumbencies at Eyrecourt, Forfar, West Bridgford, Clanfield and Meysey Hampton. He was Dean of Clonfert from 1907 to 1920, when he died at the rectory in Eyrecourt.
[ "Crockford's Clerical Directory", "Eyrecourt", "Clanfield, Hampshire", "Dean of Clonfert", "West Bridgford", "Anglican", "Meysey Hampton", "Devizes", "Kilcummin, County Mayo", "Forfar", "Kelly's Directory", "Trinity College, Dublin", "priest", "Horace Cox" ]
62,104,362
Villmarksliv
Villmarksliv (English translation "Wilderness Life") is a monthly Norwegian magazine about hunting, sport fishing, wildlife and outdoor recreation published by the Danish company Egmont. The magazine is based in Oslo, Norway. ==History and profile== The magazine was established in 1973, but also had a trial edition in 1972. The four founders Thorbjørn Tufte, Bjørn Holm-Hansen, Anton Lossius and Olaf Gundersrud with the publisher Naturforlaget AS. During the first years, Tufte and Holm-Hansen shared the position as editor, and changed who were responsible for every other edition. In 1988 Dag Kjelsaas took over the editor position. Today's editor is Knut Brevik, which took over the job in 2005. In 1992, Hjemmet Mortensen bought the majority of stocks, and took over the operations. Villmarksliv has had columns and articles written by many well known outdoor people, such as Sverre M. Fjelstad and Lars Monsen. The magazine also published several yearly special editions, such as "Ørretfiske" (Trout Fishing), "Vill mat" (Wildlife-foods) and "Norske naturperler" (Norwegian Nature Beauties). Villmarksliv also hosts the Norwegian Championship in Nature Photography "NM i naturfoto", and through the whole year readers can view contributions from the best nature photographies competing for prizes. Villmarksliv also maintain the official Norwegian records for sport fishing called "Sportsfiskerekordene". == Numbers == Confirmed net circulation figures from Norwegian Media Businesses' Association: 2011: 2012: 2013: 2014: 2015: 2016: 2017: 2018:
[ "Oslo", "Norway", "Egmont Group", "Svensk Jakt", "Vapentidningen", "Norwegian Media Businesses' Association", "hunting", "Lars Monsen", "Recreational fishing", "Sverre M. Fjelstad", "outdoor recreation", "Animal" ]
62,104,375
Ladima Foundation
The Ladima Foundation, founded in 2017, is a pan-African non-profit organization aiming to promote women in the TV and film industry. It is based in Cape Town. The Ladima Foundation was co-founded by Lara Utian-Preston and Edima Otuokon. In 2018 it launched the A-List, a database of women professionals working in the industry across Africa.
[ "Cape Town", "Elias Ribeiro", "pan-African", "Biola Alabi", "Nse Ikpe-Etim", "non-profit organization", "Bikiya Graham-Douglas", "Debra Zimmerman", "Themba Bhebhe" ]
62,104,382
File:Carcross-Tagish First Nation logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,104,396
1984 Ebel German Open
The 1984 Ebel German Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at Am Rothenbaum in Hamburg, West Germany that was part of the 1984 Grand Prix circuit. It was the 76th edition of the event and took place from 7 May through 13 May 1984. Unseeded Juan Aguilera won the singles title. ==Finals== ===Singles=== Juan Aguilera defeated Henrik Sundström, 6–4, 2–6, 2–6, 6–4, 6–4 It was Aguilera's 2nd singles title of the year and of his career. ===Doubles=== Stefan Edberg / Anders Järryd defeated Heinz Günthardt / Balázs Taróczy, 6–3, 6–1
[ "Henrik Sundström", "Clay court", "1984 Grand Prix (tennis)", "Juan Aguilera (tennis)", "clay court", "Heinz Günthardt", "Anders Järryd", "Hamburg", "Grand Prix tennis circuit", "tennis", "Grand Prix German Open", "Stefan Edberg", "Am Rothenbaum", "Balázs Taróczy" ]
62,104,403
File:Sheer Qorma film.jpg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,104,407
Sheer Qorma (film)
Sheer Qorma (Urdu: شير قرمہ‎, romanized: shîr qurmâ "milk and dates") a 2021 Indian short film Drama LGBT romance written and directed by Faraz Arif Ansari of Sisak fame and produced by Marijke Desouza. It is produced by Futterwacken Films. Starring Shabana Azmi, Divya Dutta and Swara Bhaskar, the film revolves around a woman and a non-binary person (played by Dutta and Swara Bhaskar) in love with each other. The filming began in the first week of August 2019 in Mumbai. ==Cast== Shabana Azmi as Ammi Divya Dutta as Saira Swara Bhaskar as Sitara Priya Malik as Susan, Ammi's daughter in law ==Accolades== The film won Best Short Film Audience Award at the Frameline Film Festival and also qualified for the British Academy Film Awards 2021.
[ "Marijke Desouza", "Frameline Film Festival", "British Academy Film Awards", "Divya Dutta", "LGBT", "Romanization of Persian", "Drama (film and television)", "Persian language", "Romance film", "Sisak (film)", "Mumbai", "Shabana Azmi", "short film", "Priya Malik (Actor)", "Swara Bhaskar" ]
62,104,412
Category:Suspected Wikipedia sockpuppets of GGG65
[]
62,104,414
Crown Princess (ship)
Crown Princess may refer to one of the following ships in service with Princess Cruises: , 1990-built cruise ship in service with Princess Cruises until 2002 , 2006-built cruise ship in service with Princess Cruises since 2006
[ "Princess Cruises" ]
62,104,419
Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Women's team squads
The following is the list of squads that took place in the women's field hockey tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics. ==Argentina== The following players represented Argentina: Mariana Arnal Sofía MacKenzie Magdalena Aicega Silvina Corvalán Anabel Gambero Julieta Castellán Gabriela Pando Gabriela Sánchez Vanina Oneto Jorgelina Rimoldi Karina Masotta María Castelli Verónica Artica Cecilia Rognoni Ayelén Stepnik Mariana González ==Australia== The following players represented Australia: Clover Maitland Danni Roche Liane Tooth Alyson Annan Juliet Haslam Jenny Morris Louise Dobson Lisa Powell-Carruthers Karen Marsden Kate Starre Renita Farrell-Garard Jackie Pereira Nova Peris-Kneebone Rechelle Hawkes Triny Powell Michelle Andrews ==Germany== The following players represented Germany: Susanne Wollschläger Birgit Beyer Vanessa van Kooperen Tanja Dickenscheid Nadine Ernsting-Krienke Simone Thomaschinski-Gräßer Irina Kuhnt Melanie Cremer Franziska Hentschel Tina Peters Eva Hagenbäumer Britta Becker Natascha Keller Philippa Suxdorf Heike Lätzsch Katrin Kauschke ==Great Britain== The following players represented Great Britain: Jo Thompson Hilary Rose Christine Cook Tina Cullen Karen Brown Jill Atkins Sue Fraser Rhona Simpson Mandy Nichols-Nicholson Jane Sixsmith Pauline Robertson Joanne Mould Tammy Miller Anna Bennett Mandy Davies Kath Johnson ==Netherlands== The following players represented the Netherlands: Jacqueline Toxopeus Stella de Heij Fleur van de Kieft Carole Thate Ellen Kuipers Jeannette Lewin Nicole Koolen Dillianne van den Boogaard Margje Teeuwen Mijntje Donners Willemijn Duyster Suzanne Plesman Noor Holsboer Florentine Steenberghe Wietske de Ruiter Suzan van der Wielen ==South Korea== The following players represented South Korea: You Jae-sook Choi Eun-kyung Cho Eun-jung Oh Seung-shin Lim Jeong-sook Kim Myung-ok Chang Eun-jung Lee Ji-young Lee Eun-kyung Kwon Soo-hyun Woo Hyun-jung Choi Mi-soon Lee Eun-young Jeon Young-sun Kwon Chang-sook Jin Deok-san ==Spain== The following players represented Spain: Elena Carrión Natalia Dorado María Cruz González Carmen Barea Silvia Manrique Nagore Gabellanes Teresa Motos Sonia Barrio Mónica Rueda Lucía López María del Mar Feito Maider Tellería Elena Urkizu Begoña Larzabal Sonia de Ignacio Mariví González ==United States== The following players represented the United States: Patty Shea Laurel Martin Liz Tchou Marcia Pankratz Cindy Werley Diane Madl Kris Fillat Kelli James Tracey Fuchs Antoinette Lucas Katie Kauffman Andrea Wieland Leslie Lyness Barb Marois Jill Reeve Pamela Bustin
[ "Marcia Pankratz", "Fleur van de Kieft", "Irina Kuhnt", "Jeon Young-sun", "Mandy Nichols-Nicholson", "Pamela Bustin", "Kim Myung-ok", "Katrina Powell", "Danni Roche", "Nagore Gabellanes", "Mariví González", "Jackie Pereira", "Nadine Ernsting-Krienke", "Nova Peris-Kneebone", "Cho Eun-jung", "Kris Fillat", "Silvina Corvalán", "Willemijn Duyster", "Verónica Artica", "Woo Hyun-jung", "Maider Tellería", "Cecilia Rognoni", "Ayelén Stepnik", "Katie Kauffman", "Barb Marois", "Eva Hagenbäumer", "Sue Fraser", "Britta Becker", "Mariana González Oliva", "Ellen Kuipers", "Susanne Wollschläger", "Cindy Werley", "Noor Holsboer", "Mijntje Donners", "Hilary Rose (field hockey)", "Andrea Wieland", "Teresa Motos", "Lee Ji-young (field hockey)", "Sofía MacKenzie", "Lucía López", "Magdalena Aicega", "Liane Tooth", "Karen Brown (field hockey)", "Sonia de Ignacio", "Field hockey at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament", "Gabriela Pando", "Jeannette Lewin", "Kwon Chang-sook", "Natalia Dorado", "Jin Deok-san", "Elena Urkizu", "Nicole Koolen", "Clover Maitland", "You Jae-sook", "Alyson Annan", "Begoña Larzabal", "Lisa Powell-Carruthers", "Laurel Martin", "Tanja Dickenscheid", "Jo Thompson", "Kelli James", "María Castelli", "Joanne Mould", "Choi Mi-soon", "Karina Masotta", "Katrin Kauschke", "Karen Marsden", "Julieta Castellán", "Rechelle Hawkes", "Oh Seung-shin", "Franziska Hentschel", "Jenn Morris (field hockey)", "Vanessa van Kooperen", "Sonia Barrio", "Florentine Steenberghe", "Lee Eun-kyung (field hockey)", "Tina Peters (field hockey)", "Stella de Heij", "Suzanne Plesman", "Silvia Manrique", "Pauline Robertson", "Philippa Suxdorf", "Mandy Davies", "Louise Dobson", "Margje Teeuwen", "Wietske de Ruiter", "Heike Lätzsch", "Suzan van der Wielen", "María del Mar Feito", "Liz Tchou", "Kathryn Johnson (field hockey, born 1967)", "Kwon Soo-hyun (field hockey)", "Tammy Miller", "Diane Madl", "Natascha Keller", "Birgit Beyer", "1996 Summer Olympics", "Elena Carrión", "Carmen Barea", "Kate Starre", "Dillianne van den Boogaard", "Patty Shea", "Jacqueline Toxopeus", "Chang Eun-jung", "Carole Thate", "Tina Cullen", "Renita Farrell-Garard", "Melanie Cremer", "Mariana Arnal", "Tracey Fuchs", "Lim Jeong-sook", "Mónica Rueda", "Jill Reeve", "Jane Sixsmith", "Vanina Oneto", "Choi Eun-kyung (field hockey)", "Jorgelina Rimoldi", "Michelle Andrews", "María Cruz González", "Rhona Simpson", "Juliet Haslam", "Antoinette Lucas", "Lee Eun-young (field hockey)", "Gabriela Sánchez (field hockey)", "Simone Thomaschinski-Gräßer", "Anna Bennett (field hockey)", "Leslie Lyness", "Christine Cook", "Jill Atkins", "Anabel Gambero" ]
62,104,429
File:The Man at the Carlton.jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,104,440
Governor Anthony
Governor Anthony may refer to: George T. Anthony (1824–1896), 7th Governor of Kansas Henry B. Anthony (1815–1884), 21st Governor of Rhode Island
[ "George T. Anthony", "Henry B. Anthony" ]
62,104,443
Governor Atkinson
Governor Atkinson may refer to: George W. Atkinson (1845–1925), 10th Governor of West Virginia William Yates Atkinson (1854–1899), 55th Governor of Georgia
[ "William Yates Atkinson", "George W. Atkinson" ]
62,104,445
Governor Bailey
Governor Bailey may refer to: Carl Edward Bailey (1894–1948), 31st Governor of Arkansas Thomas L. Bailey (1888–1946), 48th Governor of Mississippi Willis J. Bailey (1854–1932), 16th Governor of Kansas
[ "Thomas L. Bailey", "Willis J. Bailey", "Carl Edward Bailey" ]
62,104,448
Governor Baldwin
Governor Baldwin may refer to: Henry P. Baldwin (1814–1892), 15th Governor of Michigan Oliver Baldwin, 2nd Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (1899–1958), Governor of the Leeward Islands from 1948 to 1950 Raymond E. Baldwin (1893–1986), 72nd and 74th Governor of Connecticut Roger Sherman Baldwin (1793–1863), 32nd Governor of Connecticut Simeon E. Baldwin (1840–1927), 65th Governor of Connecticut
[ "Oliver Baldwin, 2nd Earl Baldwin of Bewdley", "Henry P. Baldwin", "Raymond E. Baldwin", "Roger Sherman Baldwin", "Simeon E. Baldwin" ]
62,104,451
Governor Barbour
Governor Barbour may refer to: Haley Barbour (born 1947), 63rd Governor of Mississippi James Barbour (1775–1842), 18th Governor of Virginia
[ "Haley Barbour", "Amos W. Barber", "James Barbour" ]
62,104,453
Governor Barstow
Governor Barstow may refer to: John L. Barstow (1832–1913), 39th Governor of Vermont William A. Barstow (1813–1865), 3rd Governor of Wisconsin
[ "William A. Barstow", "John L. Barstow" ]
62,104,456
Governor Bartlett
Governor Bartlett may refer to: Dewey F. Bartlett (1919–1979), 19th Governor of Oklahoma John H. Bartlett (1869–1952), 57th Governor of New Hampshire Josiah Bartlett (1729–1795), 4th Governor of New Hampshire Washington Bartlett (1824–1887), 16th Governor of California
[ "Washington Bartlett", "Josiah Bartlet", "John H. Bartlett", "Josiah Bartlett", "Dewey F. Bartlett" ]
62,104,457
Governor Bartley
Governor Bartley may refer to: Mordecai Bartley (1783–1870), 18th Governor of Ohio Thomas W. Bartley (1812–1885), 17th Governor of Ohio
[ "Mordecai Bartley", "Thomas W. Bartley" ]
62,104,458
Governor Bates
Governor Bates may refer to: Frederick Bates (politician) (1777–1825), 2nd Governor of Missouri John L. Bates (1859–1946), 41st Governor of Massachusetts
[ "Frederick Bates (politician)", "John L. Bates" ]
62,104,459
Governor Baxter
Governor Baxter may refer to: Elisha Baxter (1827–1899), 10th Governor of Arkansas George W. Baxter (1855–1929), territorial governor of Wyoming Percival P. Baxter (1876–1969), 53rd Governor of Maine Governor Baxter School for the Deaf, named for Percival Proctor Baxter
[ "Elisha Baxter", "Governor Baxter School for the Deaf", "Percival P. Baxter", "George W. Baxter" ]
62,104,461
Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/Assessment/Battle of Lagos
Article promoted by Sturmvogel 66 (talk) via MilHistBot (talk) 18:20, 2 December 2019 (UTC) « Return to A-Class review list === Battle of Lagos === Instructions for nominators and reviewers Nominator(s): A naval battle from the age of sail. One where Clausewitz's friction was working overtime and few things went right for either side. I am attempting to break away from late-medieval articles, so haul up your jolly rodgers and I'll stand by to repel boarders. Gog the Mild (talk) 17:47, 19 October 2019 (UTC) ====Image review==== File:HMS_Namur_IMG_4822.jpg and File:Battle_of_Lagos_1759_Detail.jpg: the caption on File:Battle_of_Lagos_IMG_4822.jpg has more details on the original source - suggest including those in this image's description page. Nikkimaria (talk) 21:44, 19 October 2019 (UTC) Apologies, but I have stared at this until I am blue in the face, and I can't see anything that isn't in the other two. Could you give me a clue? Gog the Mild (talk) 20:58, 23 October 2019 (UTC) Published 16 March 1806, chez l'Editeur Levrault? Nikkimaria (talk) 23:02, 23 October 2019 (UTC) I don't know what super power you use to see that, but I still couldn't see it here. I have added it and to the two derivative images. No - got it. I need to open the images in Media Viewer and scroll down. Now if just I knew how to edit that. Don't tell me, I shall work it out. Ah, it is already there. So, I think that that is this issue sorted. Gog the Mild (talk) 23:23, 23 October 2019 (UTC) ====CommentsSupport by PM==== This article is in great shape. I have some comments: suggest dropping naval from the first sentence, as the mention of fleets clarifies it Done. suggest "The two fleets first fought south west of the Gulf of Cádiz on 17 August, which was followed by engagements east of the small Portuguese port of Lagos on the following day." Done. is he just La Clue, La Clue-Sabran or De la Clue? I'm not familiar with the best approach to French double-barrelled names. The sources all go with La Clue; except for one de La Clue, but Wikipedia/MilHist practice is to drop leading "de"s. OK, then just drop the De from De la Clue in the Aftermath section. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:13, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Drat! Done. "Boscawen was under orders to prevent this, and to pursue and attack the French if it didif they broke out into the Atlantic."? Done. link Gibraltar at first mention and get rid of the later one It is only linked once. As is "Strait of Gibraltar" and "HMS Gibraltar". Sorry, I meant it isn't linked in the lead. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Ah! Now also linked in the lead. "By the beginning of 1759 neither alliance had the advantage, in either the land or sea campaigns," Done. link French Navy at first mention and get rid of the later one Done. "Meanwhile, Britain's war efforts during the first three years of the war had been a failure" Done. what role was Pitt performing at the time? How long have you got? Good point. I have inserted the simplistic answer. I'm not seeing this? Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) There is something going wrong with my edits today, which is a bit worrying. Now definitely done. for "direct invasion of Britain" link Planned French invasion of Britain (1759). I think doubling up on the Further template is justified given it will be piped. Done. link Vannes Done. link Brest Done. perhaps say where Lorient and Rochefort are? And drop " French Atlantic port of" later for Rochefort Done. "smaller and faster than ships of the line and primarily intended for raiding" Oops. Done. comma after "After great difficulties in preparing them for sea" Done. suggest "The British fleet was surprised by the approaching Gibraltar, which was firing her guns to indicate the enemy had been sighted." I am not at all keen on that. What is it that you don't like about the current phraseology? under way→underway? Why? See definition 2 of this. I think a few style guides are now saying it is compounded whether used as an adverb or adjective, but if wikt says so... Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) When used nautically I have never seen it compounded. (It comes from "under weigh".) I have just checked my hard copy OED and Chambers and neither give "underway" as an option. is it " stepping in" or "stepping-in"? Wiktionary claims that it is only hyphenated if you are referring to women's underwear! I was checking to play safe; one steps in a mast as one would step in anything else. disbursed→dispersed? Close. "but ineffectively"→"but this was ineffective"? I have gone with "but with little effect". "90-gun flagship" Done. "80-gun Océan" Done. A bit weird that Souverain is the slowest ship initially, then later one of the fastest? Whoops. Thank you. Fixed. These French ships all look the same to me. what does weather mean in "failed to weather Cape St. Vincent"? Wiktionary has "(nautical) To pass to windward in a vessel, especially to beat 'round: to weather a cape ... " I have inserted a Wikt link. "it would be illegal" I think it might be worth adding a sentence about the law that this would breach. A reasonable suggestion. Unfortunately all of the sources take it for granted that it will be understood what is meant. A hunt through their and some other indexes doesn't reveal anything helpful looking. I could readily write the sentence, but I imagine that you would go all fussy and want sources. I will do a literature search and see what come up. Perhaps a link to Neutral country will suffice when Portugal's neutral status is first mentioned. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Done, although I have already set a research assistant to chasing this down, so I may have a little more later. suggest "HMS America" Er. I do at first mention. The other mention is "The British America", so it is not going to confuse. It is the only America mentioned or involved, so you could probably drop the "British" then. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) If you wish. It is the first mention in a new section - "The British America attacked Océan ... " - so it seemed worth reminding a reader who was doing the aggressing. "Téméraire also struck her colours" Really? OK. Done. Lieutenant-General? I thought that was Vice-Amiral for the French Navy? Nah. Click the link. comma after "Souverain and Guerrier" Removed as they have already been named. Broderick→Brodrick Good spot. Done. "to be known as an annus" Bleh! Done. link Abolitionism Done. is there a citation for the Fireships in the ORBAT? Irritatingly no. Troude just peters out here, I have changed the text to reflect this and will hunt around to see if I can find where the original editor got the specific information from. That's me done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 09:43, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Hi Peacemaker67. That was very prompt and picked up lots of things I had missed. Thanks. All addressed; some with queries, and one with a 'I'll get back to you'. See what you think. Gog the Mild (talk) 21:52, 20 October 2019 (UTC) A few additional suggestions, nothing too drastic. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Good points. Thanks. All addressed. Gog the Mild (talk) 02:04, 21 October 2019 (UTC) OK, supporting. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 02:59, 21 October 2019 (UTC) ====Comments Support from Harrias==== Quick initial comment from me that the talk page query from 2009 remains partially unresolved: Harrias talk 09:48, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Good point. Thanks. Done. Gog the Mild (talk) 09:54, 20 October 2019 (UTC) The infobox still states 14, while the Order of battle section still lists 15 different ships of the line. Harrias talk 18:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Co-ordinator note: I am travelling away with work this week, and may not be able to get online much. I would hope to be able to provide a full review on this article, but if it attracts three supports etc in the mean time, don't hold things up on my account. Harrias talk 18:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Hi I know that I changed that! (It is 15.) I can only imagine that I had two many windows open and closed one without checking for unsaved edits. I am glad that at least you were paying attention. If this does fly through ACR then I am hoping to promptly nominate it for FAC. Either way, I would appreciate your looking at it. Thanks. Gog the Mild (talk) 21:52, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Personally, I dislike this phrasing, and would prefer , but it's no big deal. Done. Is it encyclopaedic to refer to France as "she", it seems archaic usage to me? Changed to 'it' and 'its'. Why but then If anything, I would expect the fuller name on the first use, and then the shorter after. Again, no big deal, just struck me as odd. Done. "in either the land or sea campaigns" feels like a clause, and as such should have a comma after it. Done. The quick repetition of "war" feels redundant. Maybe ? I have gone with 'Meanwhile, Britain's war effort up to early 1756 had been a failure.' Again, the repetition sound awkward here. Would "in domestic service" work? "Domestic service means something else. I assume that the objection is to "home waters"[?] Yes, it is used four times in four sentences, but it has a precise meaning and I am not sure what would be gained by coming up with three synonyms, apart from confusing a reader. I take your point; I hadn't thought of that, but now you mention it, I can't get the image of warships with pinnies on them out of my head. I still find this whole section awkwardly worded. It isn't just the repetition of "home waters" but of the number "43", and I wonder if something such as this would work: Harrias talk 09:01, 28 October 2019 (UTC) I was about to type "fine", when I realised that someone is bound to object that it is unclear whether the "These ships" refers to the "small number at two ports on the Bay of Biscay" mentioned immediately before, or all of them. So I have gone with your suggestion, which loses the clumsy double "43" and quadruple "home waters", but added 'In total' to hopefully forestall this objection. And reworded the opening "In total", to avoid having that twice. The lead states that but this isn't explicitly mentioned in the body, where it just says that La Clue was ordered to reinforce Bompart, and that he tried to avoid Boscawen's fleet. I have changed "tasked with" to 'attempting to'. Comma after "sighted". Done. As this is an opinion, it should be mentioned inline who proposed it, otherwise it appears that Wikipedia is speculating. You are no doubt correct, but could you point me to the relevant policy, so I know how best to work around it. It's basically the same ones that required me to include attribution in the lead for the quote: a combination of MOS:QUOTEPOV and WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV. Harrias talk 14:12, 21 October 2019 (UTC) It's not a direct quote, so I am not sure how QUOTEPOV is applicable. But you are spot on re ATTRIBUTEPOV; now attributed. Reviewed to the end of the Background section. Harrias talk 10:13, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Hi , many thanks for looking at this. All of your points addressed. A couple with queries. Gog the Mild (talk) 12:45, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Continuation It seems redundant to have "British" twice here; I'd suggest removing the first. Good spot. Done. Link General chase. Done. Again, the use of "probably" make this sound like an opinion which would need inline attribution. I have found an additional cite which states this as a fact - "Most of the logs record sails splitting and booms breaking under the strain imposed by the eager crews" so I have removed the "probably". I know that there is a link, but I feel that it would improve the comprehension of this article for a layperson to simply state It just feels like unnecessary jargon to me. Given that the phrase is used twice later (as "struck their colours" and "struck her colours") I would suggest that if it is kept an explanatory footnote is added as well as the link, as this can be read on hover, without having to click through to another article. Very fair point. I get too close and assume that everyone understands where "Nail his colours to the mast" and "With flying colours" come from. (The first paragraphs of Wikilinks can also be read on a hover - which in this case would have been sufficient. But your suggestion is better.) Who said this? Boscawen himself? Yes. (According to an eyewitness.) Typo of Redoubtable / Redoutable. Corrected. The article has previously referred to him as "La Clue". Interestingly, his (short) article suggests he was known as "La Clue-Sabran"; should that be adopted instead? "De" removed. I have come across him in a fair few sources now; none add Sabren. (Other than at first mention.) This sentence confused me for a while, and I think it needs further clarfication; something like: Nice. Gone with your variant. Gog the Mild (talk) 14:35, 29 October 2019 (UTC) Many thanks for that, appreciated. All of your comments addressed I think. I will start into your source review shortly - I am impressed that you are giving me a total service for this nomination. As with your comments here, probably in stages, and will ping you once I have finished. Gog the Mild (talk) 22:35, 29 October 2019 (UTC) ====Source review==== Citations are consistently formatted in an appropriate style. All citations appear to be to reliable sources. Although they all appear to be offline or foreign language, I was able to gain access to Willis 2009 via Project MUSE to carry out accuracy and copyvio checks: The article is free of copyvio or close para-phrasing from this source, and I am happy that the other sources would be the same. The article states that (Tracey 2010), but Willis says that Boscawen . None of the other sources mention this, and by the 16th all 15 ships of the line were at Gibraltar. Any ships which may have been sent to Tarragona therefore either continued on to Gibraltar or were frigates or lighter. So I feel confident that "the fleet" retired to Gibraltar, whether or not some went via Tarragona, and whether or not detachments of light vessels conformed to this. The article says that However, Willis merely says Indeed, two pages later, he says that Therefore, I don't think we can use Willis to support the claim that the French fleet would probably try and join the Atlantic Fleet at Brest. We now know that the French fleet, almost certainly, was heading for the West Indies. (I make this clear later in the article.) At the time that they sent Boscawen his orders the British Admiralty didn't know this and were primarily concerned that it might be the case. I think that the full context of the two sentences you quote from Willis makes this clear: "On the third of August, however, Boscawen received fresh orders from the Admiralty. England herself was under threat. Intelligence had shown that the French were amassing huge flotillas of invasion craft in southern Brittany—preparations so vast that they had cost the French government 30 million livres on flatboats alone.5 With French war strategy now tipped towards a final desperate throw of the dice, Boscawen was ordered to keep the French fleet bottled up in the Mediterranean. If the French were somehow to escape, he was to follow them wherever they went and bring them to battle. If they could not be discovered, part of his fleet was to head at full speed to the Solent to join the Channel Fleet, leaving a smaller squadron in Gibraltar to defend English interests in the Mediterranean." Is it worth including a note about dates between sources: the article says that they arrived in Gibraltar on 4 August, while Willis says that the orders came through on 3 August, which would be before, rather than during the refurbishment, though Willis states they arrived during refurbishment, therefore he presumably assumes that they arrived before 4 August. That is odd. Good spot. I will see if I can find where they are getting their information from. If I can I will report back. If I can't I will reword. I can't find this on page 749 of Willis? (Or indeed at all.) D'oh! That's because it's in McLynn (p 249 - I assume that the two terminal "49"s confused me, although that's a poor excuse). Now inserted. I seem to have dropped another cite too somewhere, which I will insert. As amazing as this image is, I can't see it on Willis page 750, and most of the rest of what is supported by that reference (from ) is on page 751 rather than page 750. 1. I am quite sure I have read this - as you say, it is a memorable image - but obviously not where I have indicated. I will strike it for now and reread Willis once I have worked through this to do list. 2. Apologies. That should, of course have been 751. Corrected. I'm going to stop for the moment, and ask if you can have a scour through the rest of Willis to check that the article accurately reflects the source. Once you're happy, I'll take a further look. Harrias talk 10:42, 28 October 2019 (UTC) Thank you for that suggestion. All Willis cites now checked. A couple of them were stinkers, which I have corrected, and which I suspect you were aware of. If you would like any pages from McLynn, Rodger or Tracey scanning and emailing to you, let me know. Gog the Mild (talk) 14:53, 2 November 2019 (UTC) Sorry for the long delay. Nice work, this is looking much better; just a couple of picky points left from me based on Willis: Willis doesn't appear to actually mention what time they went through, unless you are extrapolating that "dinner" is equivalent to late evening. Is there another source more explicit about this? I was indeed extrapolating. It seemed a reasonable paraphrase: 'while the English officers were at dinner' seemed circumlocutory and would need a footnote explaining what time officers dined in the 18th century - to arrive at the same conclusion. Or I could add, or use instead, McLynn "He was almost through the Straits undetected, east of Cueta at nightfall". I am happy with the current wording in the article, but if you could add McLynn as an additional supporting reference, I would be a bit happier. Harrias talk 22:40, 11 November 2019 (UTC) McLynn added. This isn't explicit in Willis. " the few lieutenants that had remained in the squadron were sent from ship to ship with orders for the crews not to wait for the return of their captains" seems explicit to me, especially when backed by "but to bend their sails as quickly as possible, to weigh anchor, and to head for the open sea behind the Namur." and "For those [captains] who were lucky enough to make it aboard a ship, there was little choice about which to board." Okay, you've sold me on it. Harrias talk 22:40, 11 November 2019 (UTC) One of your changes has baffled me slightly with the wording: I *think* I know what it means, but I think it needs further work. Yes. I see your point. I have changed it to 'Boscawen ordered his ships to maintain formation, to avoid his fastest ships reaching and engaging the French squadron individually and being defeated in detail.' Does that work? Works for me, yes. Harrias talk 22:40, 11 November 2019 (UTC) Harrias talk 21:40, 11 November 2019 (UTC) Hi : don't worry about the time. If I had got it right in the first place I wouldn't have had to wait. Thanks for the additional feedback. Your points addressed above. I've responded on the first point, but the nomination has my support regardless. Harrias talk 22:40, 11 November 2019 (UTC) Thanks for the thorough pair of reviews and for the supports. McLynn added as suggested. Gog the Mild (talk) 23:25, 11 November 2019 (UTC) ====CommentsSupport by CPA-5==== Claim my seat here. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 21:19, 17 November 2019 (UTC) Oh, oh! Eagle Eyes is here. Everyone watch out. Gog the Mild (talk) 22:03, 17 November 2019 (UTC) Is this really a battle and not an action? According to all of the sources, yes. Some of the sentences use the word English but the crew were all Britsh right? Yes. Me bad. Link Great Britain, France and Portuguese because these are all from hundred years ago so those countries changed a lot and are different than the current countries these days. I have held off - there is no article to link them to other than the ones on the modern states. Well I mean Great Britain could be linked to the Kingdom of Great Britain, France to the Kingdom of France and Portuguese to the Kingdom of Portugal. Done. The article Jean-François de La Clue-Sabran uses him as La Clue-Sabran so should be it La Clue-Sabran or La Clue in this article? Peacemaker raised a similar point and I replied "The sources all go with La Clue; except for one de La Clue, but Wikipedia/MilHist practice is to drop leading "de"s." Link Austria, Prussia (and pipe) Russia to the Russian Empire. Done. --> "financing the war. In 1759 more than 60 per cent of French revenue" Done. Secretary of State for the Navy link? Done. Could you please try not using seasons if possible? Sometimes in military articles it is unavoidable; where the season is actually the important aspect, not the month. But that wasn't the case here, so changed. "south-east of" vs "south east of the"? Whoops. Corrected. Thank you. I see 3 howevers maybe can remove one of them? I don't think so. I know that I overuse this, and so check before nominating. I would be happy to consider proposals for alternate formulations for any of them. I believe for every 20,000 bytes we can use a however and the second one to 40,000 bytes et Cetra. But that's the way how I think an article should be written so if you disagree then it's fine for me. French Navy Was this a proper noun at the time? Debatable. I am inclined towards saying it is - like Royal Navy. But am happy to change if you would prefer that. I get conflicting views on this. Probably not, so the n's rendered in lower case. Re-order the refs here. Done. --> "Despite these difficulties, by 11:00 pm, within three hours of Gibraltar appearing" Nice one. Done. Re-order the refs here. Done. The rest will follow. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 18:43, 22 November 2019 (UTC) Done so far, and looking forward to the rest. Thanks. Gog the Mild (talk) 21:01, 22 November 2019 (UTC) Part two --> "At about 6:00 am a group of large ships came into view and La Clue" Done. Re-order the refs. Done. --> "At 1:00 pm the French ships hoisted their battle ensigns" Done. Same as above. Done. The tone here is a little bit oddly for an encyclopaedia article but maybe that's only in my ears and re-order the refs here. Changed "felt" to 'believed' to be a little more formal. Cites reordered. Same as above. Done. --> "By 4:00 pm Namur was close enough to Océan" Done. Same as above. Done. How did he become wounded? Very good point. Added earlier to where the flagships fight. Replace the note and the ref. I assume you mean 'reverse'? Done. --> "was attacked by Warspite at 2:45 pm, but her crew refused to surrender" Done. unnecessary space. Removed. Another unnecessary space. Removed. No hyphen in ill feeling? Correct. No hyphen. Typo of crew? I am not seeing your point here. Sorry. But it is a correct use of crew. Shan't it be crews here because of plural situation? I thought that that was what you were thinking. No, when used like this, the plural of crew is crew - like the plural of sheep or fish. See crew; "2 A person in a crew: 3. (nautical, plural: crew)". --> "suggests La Clue who may have been ordered to avoid"? Gone with 'suggests La Clue may have been ordered to avoid'. Is that OK by you? No. Hang on. That completely changes the meaning. What is the problem with the original "The naval historian Sam Willis suggests it is possible that La Clue – who had been ordered to avoid battle at all costs – knowing that the entire fleet was relatively close, and not wishing to advertise his manoeuvre to the British, omitted to do this"? --> "British were unable to offer many replies"? No. "Offer much reply" is a set phrase. See * Merge sun set. No. I am not referring to a 'sunset', but to the action of 'the sun setting'. Short rang needs a hyphen. No it doesn't, it is not being used as an adjective. As in [https://www.google.co.uk/search?safe=strict&sxsrf=ACYBGNSj40pqCb-clntNlbDICtvpG3vPrQ%3A1574794328664&ei=WHTdXfyKKJeO8gKh-q7ABg&q=%22fired+from+short+range%22&oq=%22fired+from+short+range%22&gs_l=psy-ab.12...18632.20141..22869...0.0..0.117.589.7j1......0....1..gws-wiz.......35i302i39.b0Q697HZqAI&ved=0ahUKEwj8lreExojmAhUXh1wKHSG9C2gQ4dUDCAo Okay this is done if you have addressed these then we can promote it. ;) Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 18:19, 26 November 2019 (UTC) Excellent. Thanks All of your points addressed. Gog the Mild (talk) 18:54, 26 November 2019 (UTC) Note that rereading I have gone back on one of my responses above. Gog the Mild (talk) 19:04, 26 November 2019 (UTC) Hold a second the sources of Chaline, le Moing, Monaque and Troude have all a French title maybe we should translate them and some of the ISBNs do not hyphens while others do maybe standerise them? I also replied to one of your replies. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 16:05, 27 November 2019 (UTC) There is no requirement to translate titles. The MoS states "In the case of non-English sources, it may be helpful to quote from the original text and then give an English translation" (my emphasis) and I consistently choose not to; which so far as I am aware is fine. It is only with quotes that one has to translate: "If you quote a non-English reliable source (whether in the main text or in a footnote), a translation into English should always accompany the quote." I'm not seeing the ISBN inconsistency. Could you point it out? All 13 digit ISBNs are hyphenated after "978", no 10 figure ISBNs are hyphenated. I think. Hi Thanks for the swift response. All addressed, including the links to countries from right at the top. Gog the Mild (talk) 16:31, 27 November 2019 (UTC) Morning mate. A beautiful day here; what's it like where you are? Just checking in to see what I need to do to heave this over the line. Gog the Mild (talk) 10:56, 30 November 2019 (UTC) Good afternoon; grey, cold and rainy just a typical North West European wether. I don't think there is much to say here. I'll pass it. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 13:00, 1 December 2019 (UTC)
[ "Defeat in detail", "Battle of Lagos", "General chase", "Talk:Battle of Lagos", "Domestic worker", "MOS:QUOTEPOV", "WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV", "wikt:crew" ]
62,104,463
Governor Beasley
Governor Beasley may refer to: David Beasley (born 1957), 113th Governor of South Carolina Jere Beasley (born 1935), Acting Governor of Alabama
[ "David Beasley", "Jere Beasley" ]
62,104,466
Governor Bennett
Governor Bennett may refer to: Benjamin Bennett (governor) (16??–17??), Governor of Bermuda Caleb P. Bennett (1758–1836), 29th Governor of Delaware John O. Bennett (born 1948), Acting Governor of New Jersey, 2002 Richard Bennett (governor) (1609–1675), Governor of the Colony of Virginia from 1652 to 1655 Robert Frederick Bennett (1927–2000), 39th Governor of Kansas Thomas Bennett Jr. (1781–1865), 48th Governor of South Carolina Thomas W. Bennett (territorial governor) (1831–1893), 5th Governor of Idaho Territory
[ "Benjamin Bennett (governor)", "Richard Bennett (governor)", "Caleb P. Bennett", "John O. Bennett", "Thomas W. Bennett (territorial governor)", "Robert Frederick Bennett", "Thomas Bennett Jr." ]
62,104,469
Governor Benson
Governor Benson may refer to: Arthur Benson (1907–1987), Governor of Northern Rhodesia from 1954 to 1959 Craig Benson (born 1954), 79th Governor of New Hampshire Elmer Austin Benson (1895–1985), 24th Governor of Minnesota Frank W. Benson (politician) (1858–1911), 12th Governor of Oregon
[ "Elmer Austin Benson", "Arthur Benson", "Frank W. Benson (politician)", "Craig Benson" ]
62,104,470
Governor Berry
Governor Berry may refer to: James Henderson Berry (1841–1913), 14th Governor of Arkansas Nathaniel S. Berry (1796–1894), 28th Governor of New Hampshire Tom Berry (South Dakota politician) (1879–1951), 14th Governor of South Dakota
[ "Nathaniel S. Berry", "Tom Berry (South Dakota politician)", "James Henderson Berry" ]
62,104,473
Governor Bibb
Governor Bibb may refer to: Thomas Bibb (1783–1839), 2nd Governor of Alabama William Wyatt Bibb (1781–1820), 1st Governor of Alabama
[ "Thomas Bibb", "William Wyatt Bibb" ]
62,104,474
Governor Bigler
Governor Bigler may refer to: John Bigler (1805–1871), 3rd Governor of California William Bigler (1814–1880), 12th Governor of Pennsylvania
[ "John Bigler", "William Bigler" ]
62,104,476
Governor Bingham
Governor Bingham may refer to: Hiram Bingham III (1875–1956), 69th Governor of Connecticut Kinsley S. Bingham (1808–1861), 11th Governor of Michigan
[ "Kinsley S. Bingham", "Hiram Bingham III" ]
62,104,478
Governor Bissell
Governor Bissell may refer to: Clark Bissell (1782–1857), 34th Governor of Connecticut William Henry Bissell (1811–1860), 11th Governor of Illinois
[ "William Henry Bissell", "Clark Bissell" ]
62,104,479
Governor Blair
Governor Blair may refer to: Austin Blair (1818–1894), 13th Governor of Michigan James T. Blair Jr. (1902–1962), 44th Governor of Missouri
[ "James T. Blair Jr.", "Austin Blair" ]
62,104,480
Governor Blood
Governor Blood may refer to: Henry H. Blood (1872–1942), 7th Governor of Utah Hilary Blood (1893–1967), Governor of the Gambia from 1942 to 1947, Governor of Barbados from 1947 to 1949, and Governor of Mauritius from 1949 to 1954 Robert O. Blood (1887–1975), 65th Governor of New Hampshire
[ "Robert O. Blood", "Hilary Blood", "Henry H. Blood" ]
62,104,482
Governor Bond
Governor Bond may refer to: Kit Bond (born 1939), 47th and 49th Governor of Missouri Shadrach Bond (1773–1832), 1st Governor of Illinois
[ "Kit Bond", "Shadrach Bond" ]
62,104,484
Governor Bowie
Governor Bowie may refer to: Oden Bowie (1826–1894), 34th Governor of Maryland Robert Bowie (1750–1818), 11th Governor of Maryland
[ "Robert Bowie", "Oden Bowie" ]
62,104,487
Governor Bradford
Governor Bradford may refer to: Augustus Bradford (1806–1881), 32nd Governor of Maryland Robert F. Bradford (1902–1983), 57th Governor of Massachusetts William Bradford (governor) (1590–1657), 2nd, 5th, 7th, 9th & 12th Governor of Plymouth Colony
[ "Augustus Bradford", "Robert F. Bradford", "William Bradford (governor)" ]
62,104,490
Template:Did you know nominations/James Humphreys (pornographer)
[ "{{TALKPAGENAME}}", "Wikipedia talk:Did you know", "Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}", "James Humphreys (pornographer)" ]
62,104,493
Governor Bradley
Governor Bradley may refer to: Lewis R. Bradley (1805–1879), 2nd Governor of Nevada Michael J. Bradley (colonial administrator) (1933–2010), Governor of the Turks and Caicos from 1987 to 1993 William O'Connell Bradley (1847–1914), 32nd Governor of Kentucky Willis W. Bradley (1884–1954), Governor of Guam
[ "Michael J. Bradley (colonial administrator)", "Lewis R. Bradley", "William O'Connell Bradley", "Willis W. Bradley" ]
62,104,499
Governor Branch
Governor Branch may refer to: Emmett Forest Branch (1874–1932), 31st Governor of Indiana John Branch (1782–1863), Territorial Governor of Florida
[ "Emmett Forest Branch", "John Branch" ]
62,104,501
Governor Brandon
Governor Brandon may refer to: Gerard Brandon (1788–1850), 4th and 6th Governor of Mississippi William W. Brandon (1868–1934), 37th Governor of Alabama
[ "William W. Brandon", "Gerard Brandon" ]
62,104,503
Governor Breathitt
Governor Breathitt may refer to: John Breathitt (1786–1834), 11th Governor of Kentucky Ned Breathitt (1924–2003), 51st Governor of Kentucky
[ "John Breathitt", "Ned Breathitt" ]
62,104,504
Governor Brewer
Governor Brewer may refer to: Albert Brewer (1928–2017), 47th Governor of Alabama Earl L. Brewer (1869–1942), 38th Governor of Mississippi Jan Brewer (born 1944), 22nd Governor of Arizona
[ "Jan Brewer", "Earl L. Brewer", "Albert Brewer" ]
62,104,505
Bull Fight
Bull Fight is a coin-operated arcade game produced by Sega in 1984. ==Description== The player assumes the role of a bullfighter attempting to defeat a bull. The bullfighter is controlled via a joystick and two buttons.
[ "MobyGames", "Bally Midway", "arcade game", "Sega", "bull", "joystick", "Killer List of Videogames", "Arcade game", "bullfighter", "1984 in video gaming", "Isometric video game graphics" ]
62,104,508
Valentina Greco
Valentina Greco is an Italian-born biologist who teaches at the Yale School of Medicine as the Carolyn Walch Slayman Professor of Genetics and is an Associate Professor in the Cell Biology and Dermatology departments. Her research focuses on the role of skin stem cells in tissue regeneration. == Personal life == Valentino Greco was born in Palermo, Italy, where she lived through her undergraduate program. After being denied admission to the graduate school at the University of Palermo, she was encouraged by her friend Eugenia Piddini to apply to the graduate program at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory. Greco is married to fellow Yale faculty member Antonio J. Giraldez, and they have two children, Lola and Gael. == Education == Greco received her undergraduate degree in Molecular Biology at the University of Palermo, Italy. In the final two years of her undergraduate program, Greco studied tumor suppressor genes in mitotic cell division in the lab of Aldo di Leonardo. == Research == The Greco lab currently studies stem cells in organ regeneration, with the goal of determining how cells are maintained despite mutation, cellular turnover, and injury. Her lab has worked extensively on the importance of the spatial organization of stem cell niches and shown that these stem cells coordinate their differentiation and migration and can clear away dead cells and tumor-like growths, repairing significant faults in tissue structure. Greco's research has led to notable discoveries in cell regeneration, namely the mechanism of hair and skin regeneration. Her findings show that hair germ cells are obtained from bulge stem cells, as well as suggest that hair germ cells initiate hair regeneration and stem cells drive the process. In her work with hair follicles and homeostasis, Greco has also determined a link between the lymphatic vessels of the skin and hair follicle development and organization. The ongoing work of the Greco lab is looking to determine how skin reacts to mutations and the contribution of different tissue types to homeostasis. William Montagna Lectureship at the Society of Investigative Dermatology (SID) annual conference (2020) Yale Postdoctoral Mentoring Award (2019) National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award (2019) Yale Mentoring Award in the Natural Sciences (2018) Class of ‘61 Award, Yale Cancer Center (2017) Glenn Award for Research in Biological Mechanisms of Aging (2017) Early Career Award, ASCB (2016) Edward Mallinckrodt, Jr. Foundation Scholar (2015) Robertson Stem Cell Investigator Award, New York Stem Cell Foundation (2015) Outstanding Young Investigator Award, ISSCR (2014) Dermatology Foundation Career Development Award (2012) American Skin Association Award (2011)
[ "hair follicle", "Suzanne Eaton", "University of Palermo", "Elaine Fuchs", "Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics", "Antonio J. Giraldez", "Yale School of Medicine", "European Molecular Biology Laboratory" ]
62,104,510
Governor Briggs
Governor Briggs may refer to: Ansel Briggs (1806–1881), 1st Governor of Iowa Frank A. Briggs (1858–1898), 5th Governor of North Dakota George N. Briggs (1796–1861), 19th Governor of Massachusetts
[ "Ansel Briggs", "Frank A. Briggs", "George N. Briggs" ]
62,104,513
Governor Brooks
Governor Brooks may refer to: Bryant Butler Brooks (1861–1944), 7th Governor of Wyoming John Brooks (governor) (1752–1825), 11th Governor of Massachusetts Joseph Brooks (politician) (1812–1877), self-declared Governor of Arkansas in 1874, following the disputed 1872 election Ralph G. Brooks (1898–1960), 29th Governor of Nebraska
[ "Joseph Brooks (politician)", "Bryant Butler Brooks", "John Brooks (governor)", "Ralph G. Brooks" ]
62,104,517
Governor Brough
Governor Brough may refer to: Charles Hillman Brough (1876–1935), 25th Governor of Arkansas John Brough (1811–1865), 26th Governor of Ohio
[ "John Brough", "Charles Hillman Brough" ]
62,104,518
Governor Broughton
Governor Broughton may refer to: J. Melville Broughton (1888–1949), 60th Governor of North Carolina Thomas Broughton (acting governor) (1668–1737), 28th Governor of the Province of South Carolina
[ "J. Melville Broughton", "Thomas Broughton (acting governor)" ]
62,104,519
Governor Bryan
Governor Bryan may refer to: Albert Bryan (politician) (born 1968), 9th Governor of the United States Virgin Islands Charles W. Bryan (1867–1945), 20th and 23rd Governor of Nebraska George Bryan (1731–1791), 2nd President of Pennsylvania Henry Francis Bryan (1865–1944), 17th Governor of American Samoa Richard Bryan (born 1937), 25th Governor of Nevada
[ "Henry Francis Bryan", "Charles W. Bryan", "Governor Bryant (disambiguation)", "Albert Bryan (politician)", "George Bryan", "Richard Bryan" ]
62,104,523
Governor Bryant
Governor Bryant may refer to: C. Farris Bryant (1914–2002), 34th Governor of Florida Phil Bryant (born 1954), 64th Governor of Mississippi
[ "C. Farris Bryant", "Phil Bryant", "Governor Bryan (disambiguation)" ]
62,104,525
Governor Bullock
Governor Bullock may refer to: Alexander Bullock (1816–1882), 26th Governor of Massachusetts George Bullock (British Army officer) (1851–1926), Governor of Bermuda from 1912 to 1917 Michele Bullock (born 1962/1963), governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia from 2023 to present Rufus Bullock (1834–1907), 46th Governor of Georgia Steve Bullock (American politician) (born 1966), 24th Governor of Montana
[ "Archibald Bulloch", "Steve Bullock (American politician)", "Michele Bullock", "Alexander Bullock", "Rufus Bullock", "George Bullock (British Army officer)" ]
62,104,527
Governor Burke
Governor Burke may refer to: Andrew H. Burke (1850–1918), 2nd Governor of North Dakota John Burke (North Dakota politician) (1859–1937), 10th Governor of North Dakota Thomas Burke (North Carolina) (1747–1783), 3rd Governor of North Carolina
[ "Andrew H. Burke", "John Burke (North Dakota politician)", "Thomas Burke (North Carolina)" ]
62,104,529
Governor Burton
Governor Burton may refer to: Bartholomew Burton (1690s–1770), Governor of the Bank of England from 1760 to 1762 Francis Nathaniel Burton (1766–1832), Acting Governor of Lower Canada from 1824 to 1825 Hutchins Gordon Burton (1774–1836), 22nd Governor of North Carolina Ralph Burton (British Army officer) (died 1768), Military Governor of Quebec from 1763 to 1766 William Burton (governor) (1789–1866), 39th Governor of Delaware
[ "Ralph Burton (British Army officer)", "Bartholomew Burton", "William Burton (governor)", "Hutchins Gordon Burton", "Francis Nathaniel Burton" ]
62,104,530
Governor Butler
Governor Butler may refer to: Benjamin Butler (1818–1893), 33rd Governor of Massachusetts David Butler (politician) (1829–1891), 1st Governor of Nebraska Ezra Butler (1763–1838), 11th Governor of Vermont Harcourt Butler (1869–1938), Governor of Burma from 1923 to 1927 Montagu Sherard Dawes Butler (1873–1955), Governor of the Central Provinces from 1925 to 1933 Nathaniel Butler (born 1578), Governor of Bermuda from 1619 to 1622 and Governor of Providence Island from 1638 to 1640 Pierce Mason Butler (1798–1847), 56th Governor of South Carolina Robert Butler (U.S. commander), Acting Governor of East Florida in 1821 Thomas Butler, 6th Earl of Ossory (1634–1680),Governor of Tangier in 1680
[ "Montagu Sherard Dawes Butler", "Ezra Butler", "Benjamin Butler", "Pierce Mason Butler", "Harcourt Butler", "David Butler (politician)", "Robert Butler (U.S. commander)", "Thomas Butler, 6th Earl of Ossory", "Nathaniel Butler" ]
62,104,532
Governor Byrd
Governor Byrd may refer to: Charles Willing Byrd (1770–1828), Acting Governor of the Northwest Territory Harry F. Byrd (1887–1966), 50th Governor of Virginia Richard C. Byrd (1805–1854), Acting Governor of Arkansas
[ "William Wilberforce Bird (governor)", "Harry F. Byrd", "Richard C. Byrd", "Charles Willing Byrd" ]
62,104,533
Governor Caldwell
Governor Cadwell may refer to: Millard Caldwell (1897–1984), 29th Governor of Florida Tod Robinson Caldwell (1818–1874), 41st Governor of North Carolina William Bletterman Caldwell, Governor of the Red River Colony from 1848 to 1855
[ "Millard Caldwell", "Red River Colony", "Tod Robinson Caldwell" ]
62,104,538
Governor Cannon
Governor Cannon may refer to: Newton Cannon (1781–1841), 8th Governor of Tennessee William Cannon (1809–1865), 40th Governor of Delaware
[ "Newton Cannon", "William Cannon" ]
62,104,540
Governor Carlin
Governor Carlin may refer to: John W. Carlin (born 1940), 40th Governor of Kansas Thomas Carlin (1789–1852), 7th Governor of Illinois
[ "Thomas Carlin", "John W. Carlin" ]
62,104,543
Governor Carlson
Governor Carlson may refer to: Arne Carlson (born 1934), 37th Governor of Minnesota Frank Carlson (1893–1987), 30th Governor of Kansas George Alfred Carlson (1876–1926), 20th Governor of Colorado
[ "George Alfred Carlson", "Frank Carlson", "Arne Carlson" ]
62,104,545
Alfred C. and Annie L. Olsen Anderson House
The Alfred C. and Annie L. Olsen Anderson House, located at 8850 South 60 East in Sandy, Utah, was constructed around 1916. This historic dwelling earned a place on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999, Notably, the house holds significance as "an interesting example of Sandy's residential architecture in transition during the early twentieth century. The house is essentially a transitional Victorian cottage, displaying the influence of both the bungalow style and Craftsman movement." Alfred was born near Oslo, Norway; Annie was from Salt Lake City.
[ "Sandy Historic District", "Sandy, Utah", "Oslo", "Norway", "National Park Service", "National Register of Historic Places" ]
62,104,549
Governor Carr
Governor Carr may refer to: Caleb Carr (governor) (1616–1695), 16th Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations from 1695 to 1695 Elias Carr (1839–1900), 48th Governor of North Carolina Ralph Lawrence Carr (1887–1950), 29th Governor of Colorado
[ "Elias Carr", "Caleb Carr (governor)", "Ralph Lawrence Carr" ]
62,104,552
Governor Carroll
Governor Carroll may refer to: Beryl F. Carroll (1860–1939), 20th Governor of Iowa John Lee Carroll (1830–1911), 37th Governor of Maryland Julian Carroll (born 1931), 54th Governor of Kentucky Thomas King Carroll (1793–1873), 21st Governor of Maryland William Carroll (Tennessee politician) (1788–1844), 5th Governor of Tennessee
[ "Julian Carroll", "John Lee Carroll", "William Carroll (Tennessee politician)", "Beryl F. Carroll", "Thomas King Carroll" ]
62,104,554
Governor Case
Governor Case may refer to: Clarence E. Case (1877–1961), Acting Governor of New Jersey in 1920 Norman S. Case (1888–1967), 56th Governor of Rhode Island
[ "Clarence E. Case", "Norman S. Case" ]
62,104,557
Governor Chafee
Governor Chafee may refer to: John Chafee (1922–1999), 66th Governor of Rhode Island Lincoln Chafee (born 1953), 74th Governor of Rhode Island
[ "John Chafee", "Lincoln Chafee" ]
62,104,559
Governor Chamberlain
Governor Chamberlain may refer to: Abiram Chamberlain (1837–1911), 60th Governor of Connecticut Daniel Henry Chamberlain (1835–1907), 76th Governor of South Carolina George Earle Chamberlain (1854–1928), 11th Governor of Oregon Joshua Chamberlain (1828–1914), 32nd Governor of Maine
[ "Joshua Chamberlain", "Abiram Chamberlain", "George Earle Chamberlain", "Daniel Henry Chamberlain" ]
62,104,562
Governor Chase
Governor Chase may refer to: Ira Joy Chase (1834–1895), 22nd Governor of Indiana Salmon P. Chase (1808–1873), 23rd Governor of Ohio
[ "Salmon P. Chase", "Ira Joy Chase" ]
62,104,563
Governor Cherry
Governor Cherry may refer to: Francis Cherry (governor) (1908–1965), 35th Governor of Arkansas R. Gregg Cherry (1891–1957), 61st Governor of North Carolina
[ "Francis Cherry (governor)", "R. Gregg Cherry" ]
62,104,564
Governor Chittendon
Governor Chittendon may refer to: Martin Chittenden (1763–1840), 7th Governor of Vermont, son of Thomas Chittenden. Thomas Chittenden (1730–1797), 1st Governor of Vermont
[ "Martin Chittenden", "Thomas Chittenden" ]
62,104,566
Governor Clayton
Governor Clayton may refer to: Gilbert Clayton (1875–1929), Military Governor of Palestine from 1917 to 1917-1919 Jasper Clayton (died 1743), Governor of Gibraltar from 1727 to 1730 Joshua Clayton (1744–1798), 10th Governor of Delaware Powell Clayton (1833–1914), 9th Governor of Arkansas
[ "Gilbert Clayton", "Jasper Clayton", "Powell Clayton", "Joshua Clayton" ]
62,104,568
Governor Cleveland
Governor Cleveland may refer to: Chauncey Fitch Cleveland (1799–1887), 31st Governor of Connecticut Grover Cleveland (1837–1908), 28th Governor of New York
[ "Chauncey Fitch Cleveland", "Grover Cleveland" ]
62,104,570
Governor Cobb
Governor Cobb may refer to: Howell Cobb (1815–1868), 40th Governor of Georgia Rufus W. Cobb (1829–1913), 25th Governor of Alabama William T. Cobb (1857–1937), 46th Governor of Maine
[ "Howell Cobb", "William T. Cobb", "Rufus W. Cobb" ]
62,104,571
Governor Cochran
Governor Cochran may refer to: John P. Cochran (1809–1898), 43rd Governor of Delaware Robert Leroy Cochran (1886–1963), 24th Governor of Nebraska
[ "John P. Cochran", "Robert Leroy Cochran" ]
62,104,572
Governor Collins
Governor Collins may refer to: John Collins (Continental Congress) (1717–1795), 3rd Governor of Rhode Island John Collins (governor) (1776–1822), 22nd Governor of Delaware LeRoy Collins (1909–1991), 33rd Governor of Florida Martha Layne Collins (born 1936), 56th Governor of Kentucky Thomas Collins (governor) (1732–1789), 8th President of Delaware
[ "John Collins (Continental Congress)", "Martha Layne Collins", "John Collins (governor)", "Thomas Collins (governor)", "LeRoy Collins" ]
62,104,573
Governor Colquitt
Governor Colquitt may refer to: Alfred H. Colquitt (1824–1894), 49th Governor of Georgia Oscar Branch Colquitt (1861–1940), 25th Governor of Texas
[ "Oscar Branch Colquitt", "Alfred H. Colquitt" ]
62,104,574
Man at the Carlton Tower
Man at the Carlton Tower is a 1961 British second feature ('B') crime film directed by Robert Tronson and starring Maxine Audley, Lee Montague and Allan Cuthbertson. The screenplay was by Philip Mackie, based on the 1931 Edgar Wallace novel The Man at the Carlton. It is part of the series of Edgar Wallace Mysteries films made at Merton Park Studios from 1960 to 1965. == Plot == Tim Jordan is an ex-policeman helping the police look for Rhodesian criminal Lew Daney, who has murdered a policeman. ==Cast== Maxine Audley as Lydia Daney Lee Montague as Tim Jordan Allan Cuthbertson as Det. Supt. Cowley Terence Alexander as Johnny Time Alfred Burke as Harry Stone Nigel Green as Lew Daney Nyree Dawn Porter as Mary Greer Geoffrey Frederick as Det. Sgt. Pepper Geoffrey Lumsden as Stocker Frank Forsyth as commissionaire Steven Scott as Gallo Keith Ashley as junior clerk Howard Taylor as reception clerk Nancy Roberts as barmaid Adrian Oker as waiter == Critical reception == Monthly Film Bulletin said "The latest of the Edgar Wallace mystery series, an amalgam of deductive duologues, gunplay and publicity for the new Carlton Tower Hotel, has about it the air of a television series manqué, competent enough of its undistinguished kind. Alfred Burke gives a novel style of smooth menace to his villain, but the ending where he loses both loot and life is confused and unconvincing."
[ "BFI", "Walter de Gruyter", "The Man at the Carlton", "Anglo-Amalgamated Film Distributors", "Steven Scott (actor)", "Bloomsbury Publishing", "Philip Mackie", "Howard Taylor (actor)", "B movie", "Terence Alexander", "Geoffrey Lumsden", "Lee Montague", "Robert Tronson", "crime film", "Maxine Audley", "Nigel Green", "Frank Forsyth", "Bert Mason", "Edgar Wallace Mysteries", "Jack Greenwood (producer)", "Jim O'Connolly", "Ron Goodwin", "Nyree Dawn Porter", "Edgar Wallace", "Geoffrey Frederick", "Keith Ashley", "Bernard Gribble", "Adrian Oker", "English language", "Nancy Roberts (actress)", "Monthly Film Bulletin", "Alfred Burke", "Merton Park Studios", "Allan Cuthbertson" ]
62,104,578
Governor Conley
Governor Conley may refer to: Benjamin F. Conley (1815–1886), 47th Governor of Georgia William G. Conley (1866–1940), 18th Governor of West Virginia
[ "Benjamin F. Conley", "William G. Conley", "John Connally", "Henry Connelly" ]
62,104,579
Governor Conway
Governor Conway may refer to: Elias Nelson Conway (1812–1892), 5th Governor of Arkansas Henry Seymour Conway (1721–1795), Governor of Jersey from 1772 to 1795 James Sevier Conway (1798–1855), 1st Governor of Arkansas Thomas Conway (1735–1800), Governor of French colonies in India from 1787 to 1789 William B. Conway (1802–1839), Acting Governor of Iowa Territory
[ "Henry Seymour Conway", "Thomas Conway", "James Sevier Conway", "William B. Conway", "Elias Nelson Conway" ]
62,104,580
Governor Coolidge
Governor Coolidge may refer to: Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933), 48th Governor of Massachusetts Carlos Coolidge (1792–1866), 19th Governor of Vermont
[ "Carlos Coolidge", "Calvin Coolidge" ]
62,104,584
Governor Cooper
Governor Cooper may refer to: Job Adams Cooper (1843–1899), 6th Governor of Colorado Myers Y. Cooper (1873–1958), 51st Governor of Ohio Prentice Cooper (1895–1969), 39th Governor of Tennessee Robert Archer Cooper (1874–1953), 93rd Governor of South Carolina Roy Cooper (born 1957), 75th Governor of North Carolina William B. Cooper (Delaware politician) (1771–1849), 32nd Governor of Delaware
[ "Roy Cooper", "Myers Y. Cooper", "Robert Archer Cooper", "William B. Cooper (Delaware politician)", "Job Adams Cooper", "Prentice Cooper" ]
62,104,586
Governor Craig
Governor Craig may refer to: George N. Craig (1909–1992), 39th Governor of Indiana James Henry Craig (1748–1812), Governor-General of Canada from 1807 to 1811 Locke Craig (1860–1924), 53rd Governor of North Carolina
[ "George N. Craig", "Locke Craig", "James Henry Craig" ]
62,104,587
Governor Crawford
Governor Crawford may refer to: Coe I. Crawford (1858–1944), 6th Governor of South Dakota Frederick Crawford (colonial administrator) (1906–1978), Governor of Uganda from 1957 to 1961 and Governor of the Seychelles from 1951 to 1953 George W. Crawford (1798–1872), 38th Governor of Georgia Samuel J. Crawford (1835–1913), 3rd Governor of Kansas
[ "Frederick Crawford (colonial administrator)", "Samuel J. Crawford", "George W. Crawford", "Coe I. Crawford" ]
62,104,588
Governor Crittenden
Governor Crittenden may refer to: John J. Crittenden (1787–1863), 17th Governor of Kentucky Robert Crittenden (1797–1834), Acting Governor of Arkansas Territory, brother of John J. Crittenden Thomas Theodore Crittenden (1832–1909), 24th Governor of Missouri, nephew of John J. Crittenden and Robert Crittenden.
[ "Thomas Theodore Crittenden", "Robert Crittenden", "John J. Crittenden" ]
62,104,589
Governor Crosby
Governor Crosby may refer to: John Schuyler Crosby (1839–1914), 5th Governor of the Montana Territory Robert B. Crosby (1911–2000), 27th Governor of Nebraska William G. Crosby (1805–1881), 23rd Governor of Maine
[ "John Schuyler Crosby", "Robert B. Crosby", "William G. Crosby" ]
62,104,590
Governor Cross
Governor Cross may refer to: Burton M. Cross (1902–1998), 61st and 63rd Governor of Maine Wilbur Lucius Cross (1862–1948), 71st Governor of Connecticut
[ "Burton M. Cross", "Wilbur Lucius Cross" ]
62,104,591
Governor Curtis
Governor Curtis may refer to: Kenneth M. Curtis (born 1931), 68th Governor of Maine Oakley C. Curtis (1865–1924), 50th Governor of Maine
[ "Oakley C. Curtis", "Kenneth M. Curtis" ]
62,104,592
Governor Cutler
Governor Cutler may refer to: John Christopher Cutler (1846–1928), 2nd Governor of Utah Nathan Cutler (1775–1861), 7th Governor of Maine
[ "John Christopher Cutler", "Nathan Cutler" ]
62,104,593
Governor Dalton
Governor Dalton may refer to: John M. Dalton (1900–1972), 45th Governor of Missouri John N. Dalton (1931–1986), 63rd Governor of Virginia
[ "John N. Dalton", "John M. Dalton" ]
62,104,594
Governor Dempsey
Governor Dempsey may refer to: John J. Dempsey (1879–1958), 13th Governor of New Mexico John N. Dempsey (1915–1989), 81st Governor of Connecticut
[ "John N. Dempsey", "John J. Dempsey" ]
62,104,596
Governor Dickerson
Governor Dickerson may refer to: Denver S. Dickerson (1872–1925), 11th Governor of Nevada Mahlon Dickerson (1770–1853), 7th Governor of New Jersey Philemon Dickerson (1788–1862), 12th Governor of New Jersey
[ "Mahlon Dickerson", "Denver S. Dickerson", "Philemon Dickerson" ]
62,104,597
Governor Dickinson
Governor Dickinson may refer to: John Dickinson (1732–1808), 5th President of Pennsylvania Luren Dickinson (1859–1943), 37th Governor of Michigan
[ "Luren Dickinson", "John Dickinson" ]
62,104,599
File:Man at the Carlton Tower.jpg
==Summary== == Licensing ==
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