page_id
int64 12
2.54M
| title
stringlengths 1
261
| cleaned_text
stringlengths 0
753k
| linked_titles
listlengths 0
29.9k
|
---|---|---|---|
62,104,983 |
Governor Tucker
|
Governor Tucker may refer to:
Daniel Tucker (colonial administrator) (1575–1625), 2nd Governor of Bermuda from 1616 to 1619
Jim Guy Tucker (born 1943), 43rd Governor of Arkansas
Tilghman Tucker (1802–1859), 13th Governor of Mississippi
|
[
"Tilghman Tucker",
"Daniel Tucker (colonial administrator)",
"Jim Guy Tucker"
] |
62,104,987 |
Governor Vance
|
Governor Vance may refer to:
Joseph Vance (Ohio politician) (1786–1852), 13th Governor of Ohio
Zebulon Baird Vance (1830–1894), 37th and 43rd Governor of North Carolina
|
[
"Zebulon Baird Vance",
"Joseph Vance (Ohio politician)"
] |
62,104,989 |
Governor Wallace
|
Governor Wallace may refer to:
David Wallace (Indiana politician) (1799–1859), 6th Governor of Indiana
George Wallace (1919–1998), 45th Governor of Alabama
James Wallace (Royal Navy officer) (1731–1803), Commodore Governor of Newfoundland from 1794 to 1796
Jesse Wallace (1899–1961), 29th Governor of American Samoa
Lew Wallace (1827–1905), 11th Governor of New Mexico Territory
Lurleen Wallace (1926–1968), 46th Governor of Alabama
Reginald James Wallace (1919–2012), Governor of the Gilbert Islands from 1978 to 1979
William H. Wallace (1811–1879), 4th Governor of Washington Territory
|
[
"David Wallace (Indiana politician)",
"George Wallace",
"William H. Wallace",
"Lew Wallace",
"James Wallace (Royal Navy officer)",
"Jesse Wallace",
"Lurleen Wallace",
"Reginald James Wallace"
] |
62,104,997 |
Governor Waller
|
Governor Waller may refer to:
Bill Waller (1926–2011), 56th Governor of Mississippi
Thomas M. Waller (1839–1924), 51st Governor of Connecticut
|
[
"Bill Waller",
"Thomas M. Waller"
] |
62,104,998 |
Margaret A. Berger
|
Margaret A. Berger (1932 – 18 November 2010) was a law professor who specialised in evidence. She also taught civil procedure, and the intersection of science and the law.
==Biography==
Berger was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1932.
She attended Radcliffe College (A.B.; magna cum laude) and the Columbia University School of Law (J.D.). She became a member of the New York bar in 1956.
Berger was the Suzanne J. and Norman Miles Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School. She retired from teaching full time in 2008.
Berger received the 1998 Francis Rawle Award from the American Law Institute/American Bar Association for outstanding contributions to post-admission legal education.
Berger died 18 November 2010.
|
[
"evidence",
"Brooklyn Law School",
"American Bar Association",
"New York State Bar Association",
"Columbia University School of Law",
"Federal Rules of Evidence",
"Vienna, Austria",
"civil procedure",
"Radcliffe College",
"American Law Institute",
"Legacy.com"
] |
62,104,999 |
Governor Washburn
|
Governor Washburn may refer to:
Cadwallader C. Washburn (1818–1882), 11th Governor of Wisconsin
Emory Washburn (1800–1877), 22nd Governor of Massachusetts
Israel Washburn Jr. (1813–1883), 29th Governor of Maine
Peter T. Washburn (1814–1870), 31st Governor of Vermont
William B. Washburn (1820–1887), 28th Governor of Massachusetts
|
[
"Israel Washburn Jr.",
"William B. Washburn",
"Emory Washburn",
"Peter T. Washburn",
"Cadwallader C. Washburn"
] |
62,105,000 |
Khalid Al Jubaya
|
Khalid Al Jubaya (; born 1 August 1999) is a Saudi professional footballer who plays for Al-Sharq as a forward.
==Career==
Al Jubaya started his career with Al-Hilal and signed his first professional contract with the club on 24 January 2019. He made his debut for the first team during the AFC Champions League match against Emirati side Al-Ain by coming off the bench at the 87th minute. On 30 August 2019, Al Jubaya joined Al-Adalah on a season-long loan. He made 3 appearances for Al-Adalah in all competitions and his loan was ended early. On 31 January 2020, Al Jubaya joined Al-Shoulla on loan until the end of the season. On 5 August 2023, Al Jubaya joined Al-Faisaly. On 27 January 2025, Al Jubaya joined Al-Sharq.
|
[
"AFC Champions League",
"Al-Shoulla FC",
"Saudi Arabia",
"Association football",
"Al Faisaly FC",
"Forward (association football)",
"Al-Adalah FC",
"Al Ain FC",
"Al-Hilal FC",
"Al-Sharq Club",
"Al-Nojoom FC"
] |
62,105,001 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/chennaiss.in
|
== Links ==
chennaiss.in resolves to [//104.18.53.191 104.18.53.191]
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 4 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,105,004 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/chennaiss.in
|
== Links ==
chennaiss.in resolves to [//104.18.53.191 104.18.53.191]
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 4 additions out of 4 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/chennaiss.in
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bchennaiss\.in\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/chennaiss.in]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 18:38, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/chennaiss.in",
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,105,005 |
Governor Wells
|
Governor Wells may refer to:
Heber Manning Wells (1859–1938), 1st Governor of Utah
Henry H. Wells (1823–1900), Provisional Governor of Virginia from 1868 to 1869
Humphrey Wells (fl. 1770s–1780s), Governor of Georgia for two days in 1780
James Madison Wells (1808–1899), 20th Governor of Louisiana
Samuel Wells (1801–1868), 25th Governor of Maine
|
[
"Heber Manning Wells",
"Humphrey Wells",
"James Madison Wells",
"Thomas Welles",
"Henry H. Wells",
"floruit",
"Samuel Wells"
] |
62,105,006 |
Governor Wood
|
Governor Wood may refer to:
Edward Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax (1881–1959), Governor-General of India from 1926 to 1931
George Tyler Wood (1795–1858), 2nd Governor of Texas
James Wood (governor) (1741–1813), 11th Governor of Virginia
John Wood (governor) (1798–1880), 12th Governor of Illinois
Leonard Wood (1860–1927), Governor-General of Cuba from 1899 to 1902 and Governor-General of the Philippines from 1921 to 1927
Reuben Wood (1793–1864), 21st Governor of Ohio
Roger Wood (governor) (died 1654), Governor of Bermuda from 1629 to 1637
|
[
"Reuben Wood",
"George Lemuel Woods",
"Edward Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax",
"John Wood (governor)",
"Leonard Wood",
"Roger Wood (governor)",
"James Wood (governor)",
"George Tyler Wood"
] |
62,105,008 |
Governor Walton
|
Governor Walton may refer to:
George Walton (1749–1804), Governor of Georgia from 1779 to 1780 and from 1789 to 1790
Jack C. Walton (1881–1949), 5th Governor of Oklahoma in 1923
|
[
"George Walton",
"Jack C. Walton"
] |
62,105,010 |
Governor Warner
|
Governor Warner may refer to:
Fred M. Warner (1865–1923), 26th Governor of Michigan
Mark Warner (born 1954), 69th Governor of Virginia
Thomas Warner (explorer) (1580–1649), Governor of Saint Christopher from 1623 to 1649, Governor of St. Kitts, Nevis, Barbados and Montserrat in 1625, and Governor of Antigua from 1632 to 1635
|
[
"Mark Warner",
"Fred M. Warner",
"Thomas Warner (explorer)"
] |
62,105,012 |
Governor Weeks
|
Governor Weeks may refer to:
Frank B. Weeks (1854–1935), 64th Governor of Connecticut
John E. Weeks (1853–1949), 61st Governor of Vermont
|
[
"Frank B. Weeks",
"John E. Weeks"
] |
62,105,014 |
Governor Whitcomb
|
Governor Whitcomb may refer to:
Edgar Whitcomb (1917–2016), 43rd Governor of Indiana
James Whitcomb (1795–1852), 8th Governor of Indiana
|
[
"James Whitcomb",
"Edgar Whitcomb"
] |
62,105,015 |
Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Portal:Karachi
|
__NOINDEX__
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the miscellaneous page below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result of the discussion was: delete. — JJMC89 (T·C) 09:03, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
====:Portal:Karachi====
– (View MfD)
This portal had an average of daily 9 daily pageviews in the first half of 2019. It had little maintenance to its 15 article since 2008.
The intended Portal Guidelines were never approved by a consensus of the Wikipedia community, and we have never had real portal guidelines. We should therefore use common sense, which is discussed in Wikipedia in the essay section Use Common Sense and in the article common sense. The portal guidelines were an effort to codify common sense about portals, and we should still use common sense. It is still a matter of common sense that portals should be about broad subject areas that will attract large numbers of viewers and will attract portal maintainers. (There never was an actual guideline referring to broad subject areas, and the abstract argument that a topic is a broad subject area is both a handwave and meaningless.) Common sense imposes at least a three-part test for portals to satisfy common sense: (1) a broad subject area, demonstrated a posteriori by a breadth of selected articles (not only by an a priori claim that a topic is broad) (the number of articles in appropriate categories is an indication of potential breadth of coverage, but actual breadth of coverage should be required); (2) a large number of viewers, preferably at least 100 a day, but any portal with fewer than 25 a day can be considered to have failed; (3) portal maintenance, (a) with at least two maintainers to provide backup, with a maintenance plan indicating how the portal will be maintained (b) the absence of any errors indicating lack of maintenance (including failure to list dates of death in biographies). Some indication of how any selected articles were selected (e.g., Featured Article or Good Article status, selection by categories, etc.) is also desirable. Any portal that does not pass these common-sense tests is not useful as a navigation tool, for showcasing, or otherwise. Robert McClenon (talk) 01:52, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment - This table compares remaining city portals in Pakistan against Portal:Pakistan. Robert McClenon (talk) 01:52, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
=====Pakistani City Portals=====
=====Karachi=====
User:BrownHairedGirl - Moving the backlinks to Portal:Pakistan may be in order. Robert McClenon (talk) 18:39, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note to closing admin. I don't want in any way to prejudge the outcome ... but if you close this discussion as delete, please can you not remove the backlinks? I have an AWB setup which allows me to easily replace them with links to the next most specific portal(s) (in this case Portal:Pakistan), without creating duplicate entries. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 18:50, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per nominator, and per Robert McClenon. Single-city portal, too long neglected, and it has never had support from a WikiProject.
This is a portal about a single city. It is a very large city (population >14 million, 5th largest city in the world), but the history of the last 7 months of portals MFDs has shown it is rare for a portal even on a very large city to sustain the interest of readers and editors. The four cities with a larger population than Karachi have each failed to sustain a portal: See MFD:Portal:Chongqing, MFD:Portal:Shanghai, MFD:Portal:Beijing and MFD:Portal:Istanbul. Only twoone of the top cities by population has an eponymous portal: Portal:Moscow and Portal:Tokyo.
The portal was never properly built, and it has basically been abandoned since construction was halted. It has only 15 selected articles (and no separate set of biogs), which is less than even the risibly low bare minimum of 20 set by the former guideline WP:POG. All those pages were created in 2008, since when they have had only trivial technical changes, such as punctuation and disambiguation.
Portal:Karachi/News was changed in January 2019 to automatically update, having previously been displaying the same content for four yearsHowever, the narrowness of the topic means that even with its generous setting of 200 days scope, it produces only one news item, a storm warning. So it adds little value.
There is no sign of any active maintainers, and Portal talk:Karachi has had zero posts by humans in the ten years since its creation, apart from a 2018 mass message by User:The Transhumanist (TTH).
Similarly, WP:WikiProject Karachi is not interested. I tagged[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:WikiProject_Karachi&diff=922509072&oldid=690090270 the project as , per Template:WikiProject_status#Usage:_Inactive_projects, because the last post on its talk page was in May 2018; the last discussion (where one human editor responded to another human) was in 2011. I examined WT:WikiProject Karachi and in the ten years since the page was created, the only post mentioning the word "portal" is another mass message from TTH. I checked whatlinkshere in the Wikipedia talk namespace, and there is no link to it from any other WikiProject's talk page.
And in January–June 2019, the portal averaged only 9 views/day, which is barely above background noise.
So, is summary, we have: a barely started portal, long neglected, on a type of topic which rarely sustains a portal, with no maintainers and an inactive WikiProject which has never expressed any interest in the portal. It should have been deleted years ago. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 16:06, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete we don't need city portals period.Catfurball (talk) 21:13, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Per nom and arguments of BHG and RMcC above. Britishfinance (talk) 12:52, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per nom. Störm (talk) 15:10, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per RMcC and BHG, and per the fact that there is no good reason to keep such a portal as this. Low page views and the poor condition it is in mean zero value is added by such a portal. There is no policy or guideline which suggests this portal should exist. Portals are not content, like an article is, since they are for navigation instead. It is therefore improper to use rationales meant for keeping articles to argue that this failed navigation device should be kept. There is no reason to think that hoped-for improvements and long-term maintenance will ever materialize anyway, even if promised or done at the last minute just to stave off deletion. Simple assertions that the topic is broad enough are entirely subjective; rather, that it is not broad enough is demonstrated by the lack of pageviews and maintenance. The community's consensus not to delete all portals is not a consensus to keep all portals; instead they are to be evaluated individually, as is being done here. Content forks are worthless, since they go out of date, preserve old and inferior versions of article content, add pointlessly to the maintenance burden, and are vandalism magnets; therefore they should not be saved. I support replacement of links rather than redirection, to avoid surprising our readers. -Crossroads- (talk) 05:42, 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 page's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:WikiProject Karachi",
"Portal:Karachi",
"List of cities proper by population",
"WP:UCS",
"WT:WikiProject Karachi",
"a priori",
"Portal talk:Karachi",
"handwave",
"WP:POG",
"common sense",
"a posteriori",
"Pakistan"
] |
62,105,017 |
Governor Whitfield
|
Governor Whitfield may refer to:
Henry L. Whitfield (1868–1927), 41st Governor of Mississippi
James Whitfield (Mississippi politician) (1791–1875), 18th Governor of Mississippi
|
[
"Henry L. Whitfield",
"James Whitfield (Mississippi politician)"
] |
62,105,018 |
Governor Wickliffe
|
Governor Wicklife may refer to:
Charles A. Wickliffe (1788–1869), Acting Governor of Kentucky from 1839 to 1840
Robert C. Wickliffe (1819–1895), 15th Governor of Louisiana
|
[
"Charles A. Wickliffe",
"Robert C. Wickliffe"
] |
62,105,023 |
Governor Williamson
|
Governor Williamson may refer to:
Isaac Halstead Williamson (1767–1844), 8th Governor of New Jersey
William D. Williamson (1779–1846), 2nd Governor of Maine
|
[
"Isaac Halstead Williamson",
"William D. Williamson"
] |
62,105,024 |
Governor Willis
|
Governor Willis may refer to:
Frank B. Willis (1871–1928), 47th Governor of Ohio
Simeon Willis (1879–1965), 46th Governor of Kentucky
|
[
"Frank B. Willis",
"Simeon Willis"
] |
62,105,026 |
Governor Wise
|
Governor Wise may refer to:
Bob Wise (born 1948), 33rd Governor of West Virginia
Henry A. Wise (1806–1876), 33rd Governor of Virginia
|
[
"Bob Wise",
"Henry A. Wise"
] |
62,105,029 |
Governor Wolcott
|
Governor Wolcott may refer to:
Oliver Wolcott (1726–1797), 19th Governor of Connecticut
Oliver Wolcott Jr. (1760–1833), 24th Governor of Connecticut
Roger Wolcott (Massachusetts politician) (1847–1900), 39th Governor of Massachusetts
|
[
"Oliver Wolcott Jr.",
"Roger Wolcott (Massachusetts politician)",
"Oliver Wolcott"
] |
62,105,031 |
Governor Wolf
|
Governor Wolf may refer to:
Dale E. Wolf (1924–2021), 70th Governor of Delaware
George Wolf (1777–1840), 7th Governor of Pennsylvania
Tom Wolf (born 1948), 47th Governor of Pennsylvania
|
[
"George Wolf",
"Dale E. Wolf",
"Tom Wolf"
] |
62,105,032 |
Well-Strung
|
Well-Strung is an American string quartet based in New York City by band member Chris Marchant and producer Mark Cortale. The band consists of four members, who all identify as gay: The band has performed arrangements of hits by artists including Adele, Britney Spears, Ke$ha, Lady Gaga, P!nk, and Rihanna, arranged with classical songs by composers like Bach, Dvořák, Mozart, and Vivaldi. They have also performed covers of songs from films. The band performs their own arrangements.
== History ==
The concept for the band originated in 2010 when Marchant and Cortale met in Provincetown. They also played for Hillary Clinton, for whom they had written "Chelsea's Mom", a playful reimagining of the 2003 Fountains of Wayne hit song "Stacy's Mom" that had gone viral. They have performed with celebrities including Kristin Chenoweth, Neil Patrick Harris, Audra McDonald, and Deborah Voigt. Shows have been directed by Donna Drake
Two of the band's members, Marchant and Wadleigh, competed in The Amazing Race 30 in 2018.
== Style ==
The group often crafts its own arrangements that combine the two styles of music, such as the group's cover of Taylor Swift's Blank Space layered with excerpts from Bach's Partita No. 3, or the mash-up of Lorde's Royals with composer Karl Jenkins's Palladio.
During live shows, the group often shares personal anecdotes with the audience between songs, resulting in part-cabaret, part-concert performance.
== Albums and appearances ==
The group regularly plays in cities across America and has toured internationally, playing approximately 120 shows a year. Since its formation, Well-Strung has held regular summer residences in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where the group was started. POPssical (2015), and Under the Covers (2018). POPssical debuted at #8 on Billboard's Classical Crossover Chart. They have also released two singles: a mash-up of Green Day's "21 Guns" and Pachelbel's Canon, and an arrangement of "Silent Night".
|
[
"Vivaldi",
"New York Daily News",
"Richard Jay-Alexander",
"second violin",
"Cape Cod Times",
"Christopher Marchant",
"Provincetown, Massachusetts",
"Britney Spears",
"Today (American TV program)",
"classical music",
"Washington Blade",
"Taylor Swift",
"CBS",
"Barack Obama",
"Bach",
"Deborah Voigt",
"Mozart",
"Kristin Chenoweth",
"Silent Night",
"Edmund Bagnell",
"string quartet",
"Ke$ha",
"Chelsea Clinton",
"cabaret",
"YouTube",
"concertmaster",
"violist",
"Chris Marchant",
"Stacy's Mom",
"Albany Times Union",
"Partita for Violin No. 3 (Bach)",
"Joe's Pub",
"21 Guns (song)",
"Bay Area Reporter",
"Ravinia Festival",
"The Pride Center at Equality Park",
"Pachelbel's Canon",
"Out (magazine)",
"People (magazine)",
"Lady Gaga",
"cellist",
"Provincetown",
"P!nk",
"HuffPost",
"The New York Times",
"Rihanna",
"Andy Cohen",
"Apple Music",
"Neil Patrick Harris",
"Fountains of Wayne",
"Watch What Happens Live",
"BroadwayWorld",
"Hillary Clinton",
"Green Day",
"The Amazing Race 30",
"Audra McDonald",
"Palladio (Jenkins)",
"pop music",
"Antonín Dvořák",
"Adele"
] |
62,105,033 |
Governor Woodbury
|
Governor Woodbury may refer to:
Levi Woodbury (1789–1851), 9th Governor of New Hampshire
Urban A. Woodbury (1838–1915), 45th Governor of Vermont
|
[
"Levi Woodbury",
"Urban A. Woodbury"
] |
62,105,034 |
Governor Worthington
|
Governor Worthington may refer to:
Thomas Worthington (governor) (1773–1827), 6th Governor of Ohio
William Grafton Delaney Worthington (1785–1856), Governor of the Territory of East Florida from 1821 to 1823
|
[
"William Grafton Delaney Worthington",
"Thomas Worthington (governor)"
] |
62,105,041 |
Category:Online music stores of Iceland
|
[] |
|
62,105,044 |
Category:Taliban bombings
|
[] |
|
62,105,049 |
Template:Education in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi
|
[
"East Mississippi Community College",
"Maben High School",
"Mississippi State University",
"Template:Mississippi State University",
"Sturgis High School (Mississippi)",
"Henderson High School (Mississippi)",
"Oktibbeha County School District",
"West Oktibbeha County High School",
"East Oktibbeha County High School",
"Oktibbeha County, Mississippi",
"Starkville Academy",
"Starkville High School",
"Alexander High School (Mississippi)",
"Starkville-Oktibbeha County Public Library System",
"Starkville Oktibbeha Consolidated School District",
"Moor High School"
] |
|
62,105,064 |
Mehmet Erdem Uğurlu
|
Mehmet Erdem Uğurlu (born 9 July 1988) is a Turkish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Iğdır.
==Professional career==
On 19 June 2019, signed his first professional contract with Gaziantep as they were promoted into the Süper Lig. Uğurlu made his professional debut in a 4-1 Süper Lig loss to Trabzonspor on 19 October 2019.
|
[
"Gaziantep F.K.",
"Keçiörengücü",
"Association football",
"Bursaspor",
"midfielder",
"BAKspor",
"Gazişehir Gaziantep F.K.",
"Süper Lig",
"Göztepe S.K.",
"MKE Ankaragücü",
"Gazi Üniversitesispor",
"Osmanlıspor",
"Iğdır FK",
"Altay S.K.",
"Midfielder",
"Trabzonspor",
"Kırıkkale"
] |
62,105,174 |
Richard D. Todd
|
Richard D. Todd (1951 – August 22, 2008) was an American psychiatrist who served as the Blanche F. Ittleson Professor of Psychiatry and director of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. He specialized in the genetic and environmental causes of child and adolescent psychiatric disorders, such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and autism. Born in Oklahoma, he was educated at Vanderbilt University, the University of Texas at Dallas, and the University of Texas at San Antonio. He died of leukemia on August 22, 2008. At the time of his death, he was a member of the editorial board of the academic journal Biological Psychiatry, which published an obituary for him.
|
[
"attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder",
"autism",
"Vanderbilt University",
"St. Louis",
"editorial board",
"Oklahoma",
"American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry",
"Psychiatric genetics",
"Biological Psychiatry",
"Washington University School of Medicine",
"Child and adolescent psychiatry",
"Missouri",
"obituary",
"Psychiatry",
"University of Texas at Dallas",
"University of Texas at San Antonio",
"genetics",
"academic journal",
"leukemia",
"psychiatric disorder"
] |
62,105,202 |
Hussain Al-Eisa
|
Hussain Al-Eisa (; born 29 December 2000) is a Saudi professional footballer who plays as a winger for Saudi Professional League club Al-Wehda.
==Career==
===Al-Adalah===
Al-Eisa started his career with Al-Adalah where he was promoted from the youth team to the first team. He signed his first professional contract with the club on 24 June 2018. Al-Eisa helped Al-Adalah reach the Pro League, the top tier of Saudi football, for the first time in the club's history. On 11 June 2019, Al-Eisa renewed his contract with Al-Adalah following their promotion to the Pro League.
===Al-Wehda===
On 27 September 2020, Al-Eisa left Al-Adalah and joined Al-Wehda.
===Al-Batin===
Following Al-Wehda's relegation to the MS League, Al-Eisa joined Al-Batin on loan until the end of the 2021–22 season.
==Career statistics==
===Club===
==Honours==
===International===
Saudi Arabia U23
AFC U-23 Asian Cup: 2022
|
[
"Saudi Arabia",
"Saudi Second Division",
"Saudi Professional League",
"2022–23 Al-Wehda Club season",
"Al-Batin FC",
"Hofuf",
"2023–24 Al-Wehda Club season",
"Saudi Arabia national under-23 football team",
"2019–20 Al-Adalah F.C. season",
"Kings Cup (Saudi Arabia)",
"Al-Wehda Club (Mecca)",
"2017–18 Saudi Second Division",
"AFC U-23 Asian Cup",
"Al-Adalah FC",
"Al Wehda Club (Mecca)",
"Association football",
"Prince Mohammad bin Salman League",
"2022 AFC U-23 Asian Cup",
"2020–21 Al-Wehda Club season",
"Winger (association football)",
"2018 King Cup",
"2018–19 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League",
"Saudi Arabia national football team",
"Saudi Super Cup",
"2021–22 Al-Batin FC season"
] |
62,105,326 |
The Hound of Blackwood Castle
|
The Hound of Blackwood Castle (German: Der Hund von Blackwood Castle) is a 1968 West German crime film directed by Alfred Vohrer and starring Heinz Drache, Karin Baal and Horst Tappert. Based on a story by Edgar Wallace, it also draws inspiration from Arthur Conan Doyle's 1902 novel The Hound of the Baskervilles.
The film's sets were designed by the art directors Walter Kutz and Wilhelm Vorwerg. It was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location around the city.
==Synopsis==
Scotland Yard are called in to investigate a series of killings at Blackwood Castle, apparently committed by a giant animal.
==Cast==
|
[
"Horst Tappert",
"Kurt Waitzmann",
"Harry Wüstenhagen",
"Siegfried Schürenberg",
"Spandau Studios",
"Erwin Gitt",
"Karin Baal",
"Arthur Conan Doyle",
"Horst Wendlandt",
"Rialto Film",
"The Hound of the Baskervilles",
"Paul Berger (actor)",
"art director",
"Kurd Pieritz",
"location shooting",
"crime film",
"Herbert Reinecker",
"Alfred Vohrer",
"Agnes Windeck",
"Karl Löb",
"Arthur Binder",
"Wilhelm Vorwerg",
"Alexander Engel",
"Walter Kutz",
"Edgar Wallace",
"Peter Thomas (composer)",
"Constantin Film",
"Heinz Drache",
"Berlin",
"Jutta Hering",
"Uta Levka",
"Scotland Yard",
"Ilse Pagé",
"Otto Stern (actor)",
"Rainer Brandt",
"Mady Rahl",
"Hans Söhnker",
"German language",
"Tilo von Berlepsch"
] |
62,105,364 |
Mohammed Al-Moqahwi
|
Mohammed Al-Moqahwi (; born 11 February 1995) is a Saudi professional footballer who plays for Al-Nairyah as a goalkeeper.
==Career==
Al-Moqahwi started his career with Al-Adalah where he was promoted from the youth team to the first team, On 2015. Al-Moqahwi helped Al-Adalah reach the Pro League, the top tier of Saudi football, for the first time in the club's history. On 12 September 2023, Al-Moqahwi joined Hajer on a one-year loan.
|
[
"Saudi Arabia",
"Association football",
"Al-Nairyah Club",
"Saudi Professional League",
"Al-Adalah FC",
"Goalkeeper (association football)",
"Hajer FC"
] |
62,105,371 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Rhynocoris marginatus
|
[
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"Rhynocoris marginatus",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}"
] |
|
62,105,393 |
Category:Taliban attacks in Kabul
|
Taliban attacks in Kabul.
|
[
"Kabul",
"Taliban"
] |
62,105,397 |
Lofoten Declaration
|
The Lofoten Declaration, drafted in August 2017, is an international manifesto calling for the end of hydrocarbon exploration and further expansion of fossil fuel reserves for climate change mitigation. It calls for fossil fuel divestment and phase-out of use with a just transition to a low-carbon economy. A diverse group of signatories has signed the declaration, affirming demands for early leadership in efforts from the economies that have benefited the most from fossil fuel extraction. The Declaration was named for the Lofoten archipelago where public concern has successfully prevented offshore development of petroleum reserves.
Signed by 600 organizations spanning 76 countries, the Declaration is believed to have helped influence the government of Norway to divest from investment in exploration and production.
The Lofoten Declaration also helped mobilize efforts for a global treaty on a managed decline of fossil fuel production, such as the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative.
|
[
"Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative",
"Stand.earth",
"fossil fuel divestment",
"hydrocarbon exploration",
"Lofoten",
"Just Transition",
"proven reserves",
"low-carbon economy",
"fossil fuel",
"350.org",
"Climate Policy (journal)",
"Energy Research & Social Science",
"fossil fuel phase-out",
"climate change mitigation"
] |
62,105,399 |
Lucy Fato
|
Luciana "Lucy" Fato (born 1966) is an American corporate attorney.
Since May 2024 she has been Executive Vice President & General Counsel for Seaport Entertainment Group.
Prior to joining Seaport Entertainment Group, she was vice chair and general counsel at American International Group (AIG). She held senior roles at Marsh & McLennan Companies, and McGraw Hill Financial (now S&P Global).
==Early life and education==
Fato was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1966. She attended The Ellis School in Pittsburgh, graduating in 1984.
She received a BA in business and economics from the University of Pittsburgh in 1988, and a JD from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 1991.
==Career==
===Davis Polk & Wardwell===
Fato began her legal career in 1991 at the law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell in New York City. In 2000 she was elected a corporate partner in the capital markets department of the firm. She advised multinational companies on a range of corporate matters, and gained an increasing reputation as a problem solver capable of resolving high-profile government lawsuits.
===Marsh & McLennan Companies===
In September 2005, Fato was hired by Marsh & McLennan Companies (MMC) as Deputy General Counsel and Corporate Secretary. She was heavily involved in the sale of two former Marsh & McLennan businesses: Putnam Investments in 2007, and the Kroll corporate-intelligence unit in 2010. In addition, she helped reshape MMC's global legal department, overhauled the company's governance practices, and reduced legal operations expenses by more than 50%. Fato immediately employed her skills in relationship-building and conciliation to resolve the lawsuits; on the morning of her first day as general counsel she phoned several government lawyers. Within six months she negotiated favorable global settlements with the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and 22 state attorneys general. During her time at Nardello she was credited with growing the firm's network and global culture of teamwork. When she left the firm in October 2017 she remained on Nardello's newly formed advisory board, to help guide it in its next phase of growth.
===AIG===
In October 2017, Fato became executive vice president and general counsel of AIG, succeeding Peter Solmssen. She was appointed by the new CEO of AIG, Brian Duperreault, who had been the CEO of Marsh & McLennan Companies during her tenure there. through July 2019 and again in 2022.
From September 2023 through March 2024 she was vice chair at AIG. She is also part of the company's executive leadership team and participates in all strategic and policy decisions regarding AIG's operations. She reported directly to Duperreault,
==Board memberships==
In 2018 and 2021 Fato was appointed for a three-year term to the New York State Insurance Advisory Board. She is also on the board of directors of the Life Insurance Council of New York.
She is on the advisory board of Nardello & Co., and was a cybersecurity group member of the Aspen Institute.
She is on the boards of directors of the Coalition for the Homeless and previously served on the board of directors of Advocates for Children of New York. Fato served on the board of trustees of the Randall's Island Park Alliance and was a member of its executive committee.
Since 2020, Fato has been a board member of the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation. She has served on the board of the Harvard Law School Center for the Legal Profession since 2023.
==Awards and honors==
In 2009, Fato was inducted into the YWCA-NYC Academy of Women Leaders.
She was named one of Ethisphere Magazine's "Attorneys Who Matter" in 2015 and 2017.
In 2018 and 2019 she was named by the National Association of Corporate Directors' NACD Directorship magazine as one of the Directorship 100, which recognizes the most influential people in corporate boardrooms. In 2019 she was named one of Crain's New York's Notable Women in Law, and she was one of three recipients of Legal Momentum's 19th annual Aiming High awards.
|
[
"The Ellis School",
"Peter York Solmssen",
"Coalition for the Homeless",
"Putnam Investments",
"AIG",
"McGraw Hill Financial",
"Aspen Institute",
"New York State Department of Financial Services",
"Standard & Poor's",
"New York County Lawyers Association",
"YWCA USA",
"corporate lawyer",
"Ethisphere Institute",
"Peter Zaffino",
"Crain's New York",
"Brian Duperreault",
"U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission",
"Davis Polk & Wardwell",
"Crain Communications",
"Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania",
"Wolters Kluwer Law & Business",
"University of Pittsburgh",
"S&P Global",
"The Wall Street Journal",
"Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner",
"financial crisis of 2007–2008",
"MarketWatch",
"American International Group",
"capital markets law",
"Association of Corporate Counsel",
"PR Newswire",
"Reuters",
"Kroll Inc.",
"General Counsel",
"Corporate Secretary",
"Financial Times",
"Marsh & McLennan Companies",
"mortgage-backed securities",
"Amref Health Africa",
"Robins Kaplan LLP",
"National Association of Corporate Directors",
"Bloomberg Industry Group",
"Corebridge Financial",
"University of Pittsburgh School of Law",
"Wall Street Journal",
"Randall's Island",
"Business Wire",
"Working Mother",
"Legal Momentum"
] |
62,105,402 |
File:Charli XCX - Click (No Boys Remix).jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,405 |
Category:American book websites
|
[] |
|
62,105,424 |
George Ricketts
|
George Ricketts may refer to:
George Ricketts (footballer) (1888–1934), Australian rules footballer
George Ricketts (cricketer) (1864–1927), English cricketer
George Poyntz Ricketts (1749–1800), Jamaican-born English plantation owner and governor
|
[
"George Poyntz Ricketts",
"George Ricketts (cricketer)",
"George Ricketts (footballer)"
] |
62,105,428 |
County Hall, Cwmbran
|
County Hall, Cwmbran () was a municipal facility on Turnpike Road in Croesyceiliog in Cwmbran in Wales. It was the headquarters of Gwent County Council from 1978 to 1996 and of Monmouthshire County Council from 1996 to 2013.
==History==
For much of the 20th century Monmouthshire County Council had held its meetings in the Shire Hall in Newport. After finding that the Shire Hall facilities were too cramped, county leaders decided to procure modern facilities: the site they selected was open land to the east of Turnpike Road in Croesyceiliog.
Construction of the new building started in 1969. Following the implementation of the Local Government Act 1972, the new building was destined to become the home of Gwent County Council. and was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother on 19 April 1978. The design for the seven-storey building involved a two winged structure; each of the wings featured continuous bands of glazing with concrete panels above and below; there was a separate low-rise structure containing the council chamber and there was a bunker in the basement for the use of county leaders in the case of a nuclear attack.
On 1 April 1996, under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, Gwent was abolished and the building was acquired by the newly formed Monmouthshire County Council. However, after the building was found to have concrete cancer, and the potential rectification work required was estimated at £30 million, the county council decided it had no further use for the building.}} County Hall in Cwmbran was demolished and the cleared site was sold to Kier Group for a residential development involving 140 new houses.
|
[
"Local Government (Wales) Act 1994",
"Gwent County Council",
"United Kingdom",
"Monmouthshire (historic)",
"Shire Hall, Newport",
"Newport, Wales",
"RMJM",
"Monmouthshire County Council",
"Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother",
"Croesyceiliog",
"nuclear attack",
"Usk",
"Alkali–silica reaction",
"Local Government Act 1972",
"South Wales Argus",
"Kier Group",
"Willmott Dixon",
"Cwmbran"
] |
62,105,435 |
Kristen Marhaver
|
Kristen Marhaver (born 1982 in Wichita, Kansas) is a marine biologist studying coral reefs and specializing in coral ecology, reproduction, and conservation. Marhaver is a senior scientist at CARMABI (Caribbean Research and Management of Biodiversity) Marine Research Station. Marhaver received a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Marine Biology from the Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Marhaver was a NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow studying coral ecology and reproduction at the CARMABI (Caribbean Research and Management of Biodiversity) Marine Research Station. Her work has been by NPR, BBC, The Atlantic and Popular Science. As of October 2019, Marhaver has a Google scholar h-index of 10.
== Selected publications ==
Vasquez Kuntz, K. L., Kitchen, S. A., Conn, T. L., Vohsen, S. A., Chan, A. N., Vermeij, M. J. A., Page, C., Marhaver, K. L., Baums, I. B. 2022. Inheritance of somatic mutations by animal offspring. Science Advances 8 (35). DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abn0707
Hagedorn, M., Page, C. A., O'Neil, K. L., Flores, D. M., Tichy, L., Conn, T., Chamberland, V. F., Lager, C., Zuchowicz, N., Lohr, K., Blackburn, H., Vardi, T., Moore, J., Moore, T., Baums, I. B., Vermeij, M. J. A., Marhaver, K. L. 2021. Assisted gene flow using cryopreserved sperm in critically endangered coral. Applied Biological Sciences 118 (38) e2110559118.
Barott, K. L., Rodriguez‐Brito, B., Janouškovec, J., Marhaver, K. L., Smith, J. E., Keeling P., Rohwer, F. L. 2011. Microbial diversity associated with four functional groups of benthic reef algae and the reef‐building coral Montastraea annularis. Environmental microbiology 13 (5), 1192–1204.
Vermeij, M. J.A., Marhaver, K. L., Huijbers, C. M., Nagelkerken, I., Simpson, S. D. 2010. Coral larvae move toward reef sounds. PLOS ONE 5 (5), e10660.
Marhaver, K. L., Edwards, R. A., Rohwer, F. 2008. Viral communities associated with healthy and bleaching corals. Environmental microbiology 10 (9), 2277–2286.
Barott, K. L., Rodriguez-Mueller, B., Youle, M., Marhaver, K. L., Vermeij, M. J.A., Smith, J. E., Rohwer, F. L. 2011. Microbial to reef scale interactions between the reef-building coral Montastraea annularis and benthic algae. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 279 (1733), 1655–1664.
Marhaver, K. L., Vermeij, M. J.A., Rohwer, F., Sandin, S. A. 2013. Janzen‐Connell effects in a broadcast‐spawning Caribbean coral: distance‐dependent survival of larvae and settlers. Ecology 94 (1), 146–160.
== Awards and honors ==
TED Senior Fellow.
WINGS WorldQuest Women of Discovery Fellow.
2016 WINGS WorldQuest Women of Discovery Sea Award recipient.
World Economic Forum Young Scientist.
|
[
"Proceedings of the Royal Society",
"Environmental Microbiology (journal)",
"coral reef",
"National Science Foundation",
"Marine biology",
"Caribbean Research and Management of Biodiversity Foundation",
"Georgia Tech",
"NPR",
"TED (conference)",
"doi:10.1073/pnas.2110559118",
"Kansas",
"PLOS ONE",
"Ecology (journal)",
"Women of Discovery Awards",
"Wichita, Kansas",
"Scripps Institution of Oceanography",
"National Geographic",
"Elkhorn coral"
] |
62,105,436 |
The Dispatch
|
The Dispatch is an American conservative subscription-based online magazine founded by Jonah Goldberg, Stephen F. Hayes, and Toby Stock. Several of The Dispatch's staff (including Hayes) are alumni of The Weekly Standard, which is now defunct, and National Review. Goldberg and Hayes expressed concern over the alliance between conservative media outlets and the Republican Party, and started The Dispatch with a desire to instead focus on conservative principles, regardless of party lines. The company is based in downtown Washington, D.C.
The Dispatch began with a beta launch in October 2019 and fully launched on January 7, 2020. In January 2020, shortly after launching, The Dispatch Podcast appeared briefly on Apple's Top 100 news podcasts.
The Poynter Institute's International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) certified The Dispatchs fact-checking division in May 2020. As of October 2024, The Dispatch had more than 500,000 subscribers, with more than 40,000 of them paying for the full service. The company pulled in nearly $2 million in revenue during its first year, most of which was from Substack subscriptions. The Dispatch was Substack's first media company. In October 2022, the publication moved from Substack to its own website.
The Dispatch has been sharply critical of Donald Trump from a center-right perspective. On 6 January 2021, after the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol, Rudy Giuliani left a voicemail message intended for Senator Tommy Tuberville on a different Senator's voicemail account. This message urged Tuberville to delay certification of the electoral vote: "Just try to slow it down." The unnamed Senator gave the message to The Dispatch, which immediately broke the story. The next day, The Dispatch published an editorial calling for the impeachment and removal of President Trump.
== Content ==
The Dispatch provides free web content, podcasts, and a mix of paid and free newsletters.
Boiling Frogs – a daily newsletter written by Nick Catoggio.
Capitolism – Scott Lincicome's weekly newsletter about federal economic policy.
Wanderland – Kevin D. Williamson's weekly newsletter.
Dispatch Faith – essays from various faith writers, edited by Michael Reneau.
===Podcasts===
The Dispatch Podcast – hosted by Sarah Isgur, and co-starring Jonah Goldberg, Stephen Hayes, and Michael Warren. Jamie Weinstein also hosts a weekend interview edition.
The Remnant – a podcast featuring conversations between Jonah Goldberg and a weekly guest that mixes "history, pop culture, rank-punditry, political philosophy, and, at times, shameless book-plugging". There is also a weekly solo podcast where Goldberg discusses his thoughts on the news of the week, along with explaining his weekly G-file, nicknamed the "Ruminant".
Advisory Opinions – podcast on law and culture with Sarah Isgur and David French.
== Notable personnel ==
Stephen F. Hayes, CEO and co-founder
Jonah Goldberg, editor-in-chief and co-founder
David A. French, contributing editor
Chris Stirewalt, contributing editor
Sarah Isgur, staff writer and podcast host
Nick Catoggio, staff writer
Kevin D. Williamson, national correspondent
Jamie Weinstein, podcast host
|
[
"Politico",
"political commentary",
"Sarah Isgur",
"Washington, D.C.",
"Political journalism",
"The Weekly Standard",
"The Hill (newspaper)",
"2021 storming of the United States Capitol",
"Chris Stirewalt",
"Allahpundit",
"Tommy Tuberville",
"Jamie Weinstein",
"Republican Party (United States)",
"Toby Stock",
"online magazine",
"fact-checking",
"Poynter Institute",
"The New York Times",
"David A. French",
"Conservatism in the United States",
"International Fact-Checking Network",
"Kevin D. Williamson",
"Substack",
"Jonah Goldberg",
"English language",
"Donald Trump",
"Stephen F. Hayes",
"National Review",
"Rudy Giuliani"
] |
62,105,438 |
Jean Vuillemin
|
Jean Vuillemin is a French computer scientist known for his work in data structures and parallel computing. He is a professor of computer science at the École normale supérieure (Paris).
==Contributions==
Vuillemin invented the binomial heap and Cartesian tree data structures. With Ron Rivest, he proved the Aanderaa–Rosenberg conjecture, according to which any deterministic algorithm that tests a nontrivial monotone property of graphs, using queries that test whether pairs of vertices are adjacent, must perform a quadratic number of adjacency queries.
In the 1980s, Vuillemin was the director of a project to develop a workstation using VLSI technology, under which the Le Lisp programming language was developed. With Franco P. Preparata, he also introduced the cube-connected cycles as a network topology in parallel computing.
==Education and career==
Vuillemin earned an engineering degree at the École Polytechnique in 1968, a doctorate (troisième cycle) at the University of Paris in 1969, a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1972 under the supervision of Zohar Manna, and a state doctorate from Paris Diderot University in 1974.
He became an assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley in 1974, but then returned to France in 1975 for a position at the University of Paris-Sud. He moved to the École Polytechnique in 1982, to the Ecole de Management Léonard De Vinci in 1994, and to the École normale supérieure in 1997.
==Selected publications==
|
[
"Communications of the ACM",
"Ecole de Management Léonard De Vinci",
"Stanford University",
"Zohar Manna",
"Aanderaa–Karp–Rosenberg conjecture",
"VLSI",
"University of Paris",
"cube-connected cycles",
"École normale supérieure (Paris)",
"University of Paris-Sud",
"Paris Diderot University",
"Le Lisp",
"data structure",
"Jean Paul Vuillemin",
"Cartesian tree",
"Franco P. Preparata",
"state doctorate",
"University of California, Berkeley",
"workstation",
"parallel computing",
"École Polytechnique",
"Doctorate",
"binomial heap",
"network topology",
"Ron Rivest"
] |
62,105,449 |
File:Padma Bank Limited logo.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,105,461 |
Lizzie Gannon
|
Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" Gannon (May 16, 1865 – after 1930) was an American hoaxer who as a teenager claimed to be a mystic and stigmatic haunted by visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary, saints, and her dead brother. She had an older brother, James F. Gannon, and older sister, Margaret Ann "Annie" Gannon. Her brother, who was listed as "insane" in the 1870 census, died of tuberculosis in 1874, aged 16. In the 1880 census, Lizzie was listed as being disabled by "hysteria."
=='Angels' lawsuit==
In 1881, Gannon's parents sued Fr. John H. Fleming and Archbishop John Joseph Williams for $5,000 () in Suffolk Superior Court.
|
[
"1930 United States Federal Census",
"Blessed Virgin Mary",
"stigmatic",
"Boston, Massachusetts",
"1880 United States Federal Census",
"The Boston Globe",
"John Joseph Williams",
"William Gaston (Massachusetts politician)",
"Conversion disorder",
"Suffolk Superior Court",
"tuberculosis",
"1870 United States census",
"1870 United States Federal Census",
"1880 United States census"
] |
62,105,462 |
Companies and Intellectual Property Authority
|
Companies and Intellectual Property Authority (CIPA) is Botswana's registrar of companies and is a government parastatal. It falls under the Ministry of Trade and Industry. All types of companies (as permitted by Botswana Companies and Intellectual Property Authority Act) are incorporated and registered with CIPA, which requires them to file specific details in accordance with the current Companies and Intellectual Property Authority Act. All registered limited companies, including subsidiary, small and inactive companies, must file annual financial statements alongside their annual company returns. The registration of companies is now done online since the introduction of the online business registration system launched by Bogolo Kenewendo.
== Types of companies ==
There are many different types of companies, including:
Private Company
Public Company
Close Company
Company Limited by Guarantee
|
[
"Privately held company",
"Air Botswana",
"Private company limited by guarantee",
"Botswana Unified Revenue Service",
"Close Company",
"Bogolo Kenewendo",
"Gaborone",
"The Voice (Botswana)",
"Public company",
"Botswana",
"financial statements",
"registrar of companies"
] |
62,105,471 |
National Route 609 (Costa Rica)
|
National Tertiary Route 609, or just Route 609 (, or ) is a National Road Route of Costa Rica, located in the Puntarenas province. It is the road between Route 318 in Vasconia, Parrita and Route 34 in Playón Sur, also in Parrita, in the Puntarenas province of Costa Rica.
==Description==
In Puntarenas province the route covers Parrita canton (Parrita district).
==History==
This road allows the farmers of papaya, watermelon, rice and African oil palm to export their products. An asphalt paving project for 14 kilometers started in October 2019 and finished in May 2020 at a cost of CRC ₡ 945 million.
|
[
"watermelon",
"National Road Network of Costa Rica",
"Puntarenas province",
"Parrita District",
"Costa Rica",
"Puntarenas Province",
"papaya",
"National Route 318 (Costa Rica)",
"rice",
"National Route 34 (Costa Rica)",
"Parrita (canton)",
"African oil palm"
] |
62,105,476 |
Beyond the Sea Single Championship
|
The is a women's professional wrestling championship owned by the Seadlinnng promotion. The title, which is situated at the top of Seadlinnng's championship hierarchy, was introduced on October 3, 2018, and the inaugural champion was crowned on November 1, 2018, when Nanae Takahashi defeated Arisa Nakajima in the finals of an eight-woman tournament. The title was vacated once as a result of former champion Yoshiko taking time off to rehabilitate nagging injuries.
Like most professional wrestling championships, the title is won as a result of a scripted match. There have been nine reigns shared among seven different wrestlers. The current champion is Veny who is in her second reign.
== Title history ==
On November 1, 2018, Nanae Takahashi, the founder of Seadlinnng, defeated Arisa Nakajima in the finals of an eight-woman single-elimination tournament to become the inaugural champion.
|RD1-team2 = Takumi Iroha
|RD1-score2 = Sub
|RD1-team3 = Hiroyo Matsumoto
|RD1-score3 = 22:20
}}
== Combined reigns ==
As of , .
|
[
"Takumi Iroha",
"professional wrestling promotion",
"Nanae Takahashi",
"Itsuki Aoki",
"Hanako Nakamori",
"Sareee",
"Seadlinnng",
"Championship (professional wrestling)",
"Rina Yamashita",
"Ryo Mizunami",
"Vacant (professional wrestling)",
"Yoshiko (wrestler)",
"Asuka (wrestler, born 1998)",
"Arisa Nakajima",
"women's professional wrestling",
"Hiroyo Matsumoto",
"Japan",
"Veny",
"single-elimination tournament",
"Tokyo"
] |
62,105,483 |
Infection (Chicago franchise)
|
"Infection" is a three-part fictional crossover event that exists within the Chicago television franchise. The event aired on NBC consecutively in three back-to-back one-hour time slots on October 16, 2019. It began with "Infection: Part I" of Chicago Fire, continued with "Infection: Part II" of Chicago Med, and then concluded with "Infection: Part III" of Chicago P.D. All three episodes followed a unified story line of an infection spreading across Chicago and the first responders dealing with the repercussions. Many actors in the franchise appeared outside of their main series and in all three parts of the crossover.
==Plot==
===Part 1===
At a Chicago Bears game, members of Firehouse 51, the Intelligence Unit, and Chicago Med are tailgating. After Matthew Casey notices a man collapse in the middle of the festivities, they head over to help and find the man with a flesh-eating infection on his legs; he keeps repeating the letters "BRT." The man is taken to Chicago Med where they identify the infection as necrotizing fasciitis. Ambulance 61 gets dispatched to a house where they find two people dead inside from the same infection. Jay Halstead identifies the original victim as a student at a local university. Cruz reveals to Mouch and Brett that he is going to propose to Chloe. Burgess responds to a call at a gas station where a woman and her child are both infected. They both die later at Chicago Med. Boden begins dealing with the mayor's office when the house is assigned to parade duties. Firehouse 51 responds to a fire at Central Chicago University (CCU), where a large chemical fire has broken out. While in the basement rescuing trapped people Severide notices a panel on the wall which has the "BRT" letters on it. The discovery allows intelligence to begin putting together a connection between the infection and the university. After shift Chloe breaks up with Cruz. Intelligence discovers that the original victim was a lab assistant at CCU who had been telling professors that there would be an apocalyptic-type event in Chicago. Burgess and Upton go to Chicago Med to question him; however, when they arrive, they discover that he has died. The Office of Fire Investigation determines that the fire at CCU was deliberately set. Jay Halstead learns that another lab assistant at CCU, Veronica Song, was supposed to be in the lab at the time of the fire but didn't show up. Upton arrives at Song's house to question her; however, after Upton enters, Song collapses from infection. They are both brought to Chicago Med where Song is rushed into surgery.
===Part 2===
The press begins questioning Goodwin about the infection. Upton gets examined for potential infection after finding Song's blood on her; Song later flatlines in surgery and is unable to be revived. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) arrives to begin tracking down the source of the infection. Ambulance 61 along with two other ambulance companies get dispatched to Song's apartment complex where they find five infected patients. The CDC along with Chicago Med, Fire, and P.D., evacuate the apartment building in hopes to finding more leads. P.D. narrows down all sources of the infection to either CCU or the apartment building and identifies it's being spread via a bug sprayer. The CDC thoroughly inspects the apartment building and finds a bug sprayer being burned in the furnace. Voight and Upton begin interviewing tenants of the apartment building who all collectively describe a man who appeared to be an exterminator. CCU students reveal that they were working with the infection hoping to develop a treatment for it although their progress in this regard was destroyed in the fire. One apartment tenant mentions a blue pickup truck with a grey circle which intelligence begins searching for. When the apartment tenants get impatient they all escape quarantine but most are later found. Upton's test comes back clear and she is released. Intelligence tracks down a blue pickup in the vicinity of the apartment building and the tag plate comes back to a car rental company. CCU students along with Will Halstead continue looking for a treatment and begin making progress. Burgess and Ruzek question the car rental employee and get security footage, the renter is positively identified as an employee of the CCU lab. Meanwhile, Firehouse 51 is dispatched to a public disturbance call. Will Halstead walks in on a lab assistant, David Seldon, destroying microbiology samples, the two engage in a fight but Seldon ultimately wins by hitting Halstead on the head with medical equipment, knocking him unconscious; Seldon runs away.
===Part 3===
Voight and Jay Halstead arrive at Chicago Med looking for Seldon who had been identified as the truck rentee but he is nowhere to be found. At the public disturbance call, Firehouse 51 and P.D. have trouble maintaining order when civilians believe they know who caused the outbreak and want to take matters into their own hands. Chicago Med is put on lock down as they begin searching for Seldon. Jay walks by the security guard and tells him Voight is looking for him. Both Voight and the security guard feverishly walk down the hallway.The security guard explains that a "Code Silver" is the mandated code for a shooter in the hospital. Hospital security cameras reveal he already escaped so they begin broadening their search. Jay Halstead and Upton find a house they suspect Seldon to be in although all they find is his ex-wife. Intelligence questions the ex-wife who tells them Seldon isn't done yet. They also end up on a wild goose chase when they get many leads in different areas around the city from civilians trying to help. Seldon is setting up false leads. The team finds his lab with many medical experimentation tools and a map with an area circled that includes a parade route. Firehouse 51 arrives to assist with the parade only to find the route to have no spectators due to widespread fear from the infection. Intelligence finds out that BRT had previously been funding Seldon experiments but when funding was unexpectedly cut he snapped and started planning to release the infection. Further investigation leads them to believe that Seldon is planning to release the infection at BRT headquarters where a board meeting is taking place. The CDC and Firehouse 51 are called to help evacuate the building. Meanwhile, the team at Med working on a treatment finds a proper antibiotic that attacks and reduces the infection. Atwater, Jay Halstead, and Upton begin evacuating the building. In the boardroom Halstead finds the entire board taken hostage by Seldon and begins trying to deescalate the situation. Upton, with a sniper rifle on the adjacent building, creates a distraction which allows Voight and the rest of the team to enter. Seldon refuses to surrender and is shot dead by Voight. After wrapping up the case everyone begins settling down back into their own lives.
==Cast and characters==
===Main===
===Notable guests===
==Production==
On September 2, 2019, it was announced that the production teams Chicago franchise were planning another crossover event between Chicago Fire, Chicago Med, and Chicago P.D. Executive producer on all three series, Dick Wolf, and Chicago Fire showrunner, Derek Haas, wrote the story for all three episodes. Compared to previous crossover events within the franchise producers wanted the event to feel more like a three-hour television movie with Haas saying "This year, we just said, 'why don't we get all three shows active in the first hour?'" Haas also stated about the crossover "I haven't written Med since we did the Med [spinoff] episode. But you'll see why that's feasible, because it's less about each show having its own shape to it and more like all three shows really intertwined throughout. You could be watching any hour and be like, 'Oh, wait, is this P.D.? Or is this Med? Or is this Fire?' We're even doing scenes that you would think would be a Med scene, but it's in the Fire hour." All three episodes filmed in Chicago, Illinois and the entire event took over sixteen days to film. On filming the empty street for the parade route scene Haas said "One of the original ideas was: What would it look like if Michigan Avenue were empty of people? How spooky would that be?"
===Viewing figures===
The three-part event aired from 8:00-11:00 pm EDT on October 16, 2019, on NBC. Chicago Fire switched timeslots with Chicago Med for the evening with Fire airing an hour earlier than usual. The first part of the crossover was watched live by 8.23 million viewers, the second part rose to 8.93 million, the final part dropped back down to 8.62 million. The high viewing figures led to the crossover being called the "dominant event of the night." Deadline Hollywood said "NBC's three-part Chicago crossover titled "Infection" came on strong Wednesday night, giving a boost to all three franchises for NBC in the adults 18–49 demographic."
|
[
"Tracy Spiridakos",
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Chicago P.D. season 7",
"David Eigenberg",
"Randy Flagler",
"Daniel Kyri",
"Yahoo! Entertainment",
"Kristen Gutoskie",
"Alberto Rosende",
"Organization of the Chicago Fire Department",
"Eamonn Walker",
"Jesse Lee Soffer",
"Patrick John Flueger",
"Chicago Fire season 8",
"Kyla Kenedy",
"Dominic Rains",
"Chicago Med",
"Chicago Med season 5",
"Jesse Spencer",
"Center for Disease Control",
"Matthew Casey",
"Taylor Kinney",
"Lisseth Chavez",
"fictional crossover",
"Oliver Platt",
"Torrey DeVitto",
"Marlyne Barrett",
"Marina Squerciati",
"Kathleen Munroe",
"Chicago Fire (TV series)",
"Chicago (franchise)",
"LaRoyce Hawkins",
"TVLine",
"S. Epatha Merkerson",
"Mayor of Chicago",
"Chicago Bears",
"Miranda Rae Mayo",
"Brian Tee",
"Kim Burgess",
"TV by the Numbers",
"Kara Killmer",
"Yaya DaCosta",
"Diane Frolov",
"Christian Stolte",
"Hank Voight",
"necrotizing fasciitis",
"Chicago, Illinois",
"Chicago P.D. (TV series)",
"Dick Wolf",
"Kelly Severide",
"Los Angeles Times",
"Annie Ilonzeh",
"Joe Minoso",
"Jason Beghe",
"showrunner",
"NBC",
"Amy Morton",
"Eriq La Salle",
"television movie",
"Derek Haas",
"Nick Gehlfuss",
"February 2020 Chicago crossover event",
"Andrew Schneider",
"Michael Pressman"
] |
62,105,484 |
File:Kafi benz 83d40m 20150817.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,105,485 |
Category:Lynchburg Hornets athletic directors
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[] |
|
62,105,487 |
Clendenin Township, Mason County, West Virginia
|
Redirect Clendenin District, Mason County, West Virginia
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[
"Clendenin District, Mason County, West Virginia"
] |
62,105,493 |
Category:Lynchburg Hornets men's basketball coaches
|
[] |
|
62,105,495 |
Clendenin Magisterial District, Mason County, West Virginia
|
Redirect Clendenin District, Mason County, West Virginia
|
[
"Clendenin District, Mason County, West Virginia"
] |
62,105,503 |
Harry Blech
|
Hirsch "Harry" Blech CBE (June 1909 – 9 May 1999) was a British violinist and conductor. He founded the London Mozart Players in 1949, and was known also as a conductor of studio recordings for His Master's Voice and Decca Records.
==Life==
Harry Blech was born in London, to Henri Blech and his wife, Sophie Stock, in June 1909. His birth was not registered until the following year, and to avoid a fine for late registration his father pretended Harry was born on 2 March 1910, which date has entered many reference works.
He was a scholarship boy at the Trinity College of Music, London, where he studied violin under Sarah Fennings. On her advice he took lessons in Czechoslovakia from Otakar Ševčík. At age 18 he moved to become a pupil of Arthur Catterall at the Royal Manchester College of Music, and in 1929 joined the Hallé Orchestra.
During the 1930s Blech played in the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1936 he left to become the leader of his own eponymous string quartet, with Edward Silverman, Douglas Thompson and William Pleeth. During the war, Silverman died of a heart condition, Thomson was killed while learning to fly and Pleeth joined the army, so new string players were brought in. Blech became a conductor in 1942 under wartime conditions, and formed the London Wind Players from the RAF Symphony Orchestra. After the war he formed the London Symphonic Players; the Blech String Quartet disbanded in 1950, when Blech found difficulty in playing the violin.
After conducting Mozart concertos in 1948 for the pianist Dorothea Braus, Blech formed the London Mozart Players, which he conducted until 1984, when he was succeeded by Jane Glover. He was twice married, having children with both wives, and died in Wimbledon on 9 May 1999.
|
[
"Czechoslovakia",
"Otakar Ševčík",
"Sarah Fennings",
"Hallé Orchestra",
"Dennis Brain",
"Decca Records",
"Trinity College of Music",
"Wimbledon, London",
"Arthur Catterall",
"His Master's Voice (British record label)",
"CBE",
"London Mozart Players",
"William Pleeth",
"Dorothea Braus",
"Jane Glover",
"Royal Manchester College of Music",
"National Gallery",
"BBC Symphony Orchestra"
] |
62,105,504 |
Hollow ware
|
Redirect Holloware
|
[
"Holloware"
] |
62,105,505 |
File:Infection crossover promo poster.jpeg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,507 |
Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/27
|
[EMPTY OR DELETED TEXT CONTENT IN THIS REVISION]
|
[] |
62,105,510 |
Harold W. and Evelyn Burton House
|
The Harold W. and Evelyn Burton House, at 2195 East Walker Lane in Holladay, Utah, United States, is a listed property on the National Register of Historic Places.
|
[
"Harold W. Burton",
"contributing property",
"National Park Service",
"Holladay, Utah",
"Utah",
"National Register of Historic Places"
] |
62,105,522 |
Portal:Law/Selected cases/23
|
[] |
|
62,105,525 |
Category:Eastern Orthodoxy in Indonesia
|
[] |
|
62,105,528 |
Template:Data Thailand
|
[] |
|
62,105,534 |
File:Abbas in Flower.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,539 |
File:The Hound of Blackwood Castle.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,544 |
LC80
|
The educational computer LC80 was a single-board computer manufactured in the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and intended for teaching purposes. It was the first computer that retail customers could buy in the GDR.
== History and development ==
The development of the LC 80 started in 1983. Early in 1985 the LC80 was on the market, making it the first computer available to retail customers in the GDR.}}
The production probably ended around 1986/87.
== Software and applications==
Except for the operating system, no software was included. The manufacturer published a series of three booklets that contained software as hexadecimal machine code listings.
Software and applications were published in journals such as Funkamateur (Morse code trainer) and Radio Fernsehen Elektronik (EPROM programmer, robot model control). Given the limited availability of computers in East Germany, the LC80 was even used to control scales underground in a potash mine.
|
[
"MK14",
"Non-maskable interrupt",
"Bus (computing)",
"single-board computer",
"Buzzer",
"KC 85",
"seven-segment display",
"Microprocessor development board",
"Kombinat Mikroelektronik Erfurt",
"KIM-1",
"Leipzig Trade Fair",
"TEC-1",
"German Democratic Republic",
"machine code",
"potash",
"Micro-Professor MPF-I",
"Robotron Z1013",
"Acorn System 1",
"EPROM",
"Handshake",
"Morse code",
"TK-80",
"MEK6800D2",
"Funkamateur",
"PMI-80",
"U880",
"Reset (computing)",
"calculator",
"Zilog Z80",
"United Kingdom",
"cassette tape",
"Robotron KC 87"
] |
62,105,547 |
Batwoman (disambiguation)
|
Batwoman is a fictional character appearing in comic books published by DC Comics.
Batwoman or Bat Woman may also refer to:
==DC Comics topics==
Batwoman (identity), a DC Comics identity which multiple characters have used
Batwoman (Kathy Kane), a DC Comics character
Batwoman (TV series), a CW TV series
Kate Kane (Arrowverse), the first Batwoman
Ryan Wilder, the second Batwoman
Batwoman (comic book), a monthly comic series published by DC Comics
==Other uses==
A woman batman (military)
Shi Zhengli, a Chinese researcher studying bat coronaviruses at the Wuhan Institute of Virology
The English title of the Mexican movie La mujer murciélago
|
[
"Batwoman (TV series)",
"La mujer murciélago",
"Batswoman",
"Batwoman (Kathy Kane)",
"Shi Zhengli",
"Batwoman (identity)",
"batman (military)",
"Kate Kane (Arrowverse)",
"Batter (disambiguation)",
"Batgirl (disambiguation)",
"Batwoman",
"Batwoman (comic book)",
"Batman (disambiguation)",
"Ryan Wilder"
] |
62,105,550 |
Green border
|
A green border is a weakly protected section of the national border. The term green border comes from the area covered with vegetation: green borders are usually forests, thickets and meadows, often with varied terrain.
The act of (illegal) crossing to
the green border is associated with the phenomenon of smuggling goods and persons of a criminal nature, but it has sometimes also been politically motivated. Green borders are and have been crossed by participants of the political activists illegally operating in their countries to contact with foreign collaborators, allies, emigres and the like, or to emigrate and seek refuge.
== Green border in Schengen zone ==
Green borders exist within the European Union as the state borders internal to the European Union, crossed by tourists outside the area of former border crossings. After the Schengen Agreement became effective, crossing borders between countries where the agreement applies is allowed at every section of the border. Article 22 of the Schengen Borders Code mentions this. Only persons without EU citizenship who do not have a visa to enter the whole territory are excluded from this regulation.
|
[
"border",
"Schengen Agreement",
"European Union",
"Schengen Borders Code",
"terrain"
] |
62,105,555 |
File:Ah Nerede poster.jpeg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,557 |
Peter Dahl (rugby union)
|
Peter Dahl (born 12 November 1984) is a New Zealand born American professional rugby union player. He plays as a flanker for Glendale Raptors in Major League Rugby having previously played for the USA Eagles internationally.
|
[
"Otago Polytechnic",
"Denver Stampede",
"Major League Rugby",
"United States national rugby union team",
"Mount Aspiring College",
"Glendale Raptors",
"Belmont Shore RFC",
"Christchurch",
"United States national rugby sevens team",
"Glendale Merlins"
] |
62,105,558 |
Thomson Medal (Royal Society of New Zealand)
|
The Thomson Medal is a medal awarded annually since 1984 by the Royal Society of New Zealand for 'organisation, support and application of science and/or technology and/or the humanities in New Zealand.'
== Past winners ==
Past winners were:
1985 Alan Mackney
1986 Colin Maiden
1987 Ian Baumgart
1988 Jim Hodge
1989 Angus Tait
1992 Mike Collins
1994 Don Llewellyn
1996 Richard Sadleir
1998 Jim Johnston
2000 Robert Anderson
2004 John Ayers
2006 John Hay
2007 John Alexander Kernohan
2008 Andy West
2009 Richard Garland
2010 Shaun Coffey
2011 Neville Jordan
2012 Richard Furneaux
2013 Peter Lee
2014 Rob Murdoch
2015 Richard Blaikie
2016 Bruce Campbell
2017 Charles Eason
2018 Carolyn Burns
2019 Timothy Haskell
2020 John Caradus
2021 Gary Wilson
2022 David Hutchinson
2023 Nicola Gaston
|
[
"Shaun Coffey",
"Angus Tait",
"Gary Wilson (paleoceanographer)",
"John Caradus",
"Timothy Haskell",
"David Hutchinson (physicist)",
"Richard Garland",
"Jim Johnston (chemist)",
"Carolyn Burns",
"Royal Society Te Apārangi",
"John Ayers (organic chemist)",
"Colin Maiden",
"Alan Mackney",
"Nicola Gaston",
"Andy West (biologist)",
"John Alexander Kernohan",
"John Hay (science executive)",
"Royal Society of New Zealand",
"Rob Murdoch",
"Richard Blaikie",
"Robert Anderson (agricultural scientist)",
"Jim Hodge",
"Richard Furneaux",
"Charles Eason",
"Don Llewellyn",
"Richard Sadleir (scientist)",
"Peter Lee (CEO)",
"Ian Baumgart",
"Mike Collins (physicist)",
"Neville Jordan",
"Bruce Campbell"
] |
62,105,559 |
King of Change
|
King of Change (foaled 20 March 2016) is a British Thoroughbred racehorse. After finishing second in both of his starts as a two-year-old in 2018 he developed into a top-class miler in the following year, finishing second in the 2000 Guineas and then returning from a lengthy absence to win the Fortune Stakes and the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. He never raced again and was retired to stud in September 2020.
==Background==
King of Change is a bay colt bred in England by Rabbah Bloodstock. He raced in the colours of Ali Abdulla Saeed, one of Rabbah Bloodstock's associates. He was sent into training with Richard Hannon Jr. at East Everleigh in Wiltshire.
He was from the second crop of foals sired by Farhh who won the Lockinge Stakes and the Champion Stakes in 2013. King of Change's dam Salacia showed modest racing ability, winning one minor race from six starts but made a promising start to her career as a broodmare by producing the Diomed Stakes winner Century Dream.
==Racing career==
===2018: two-year-old season===
King of Change made his track debut in a maiden race over eight and a half furlongs at Nottingham Racecourse on 31 October in which he started at odds of 12/1 and finished second, beaten half a length by the favourite Dalaalaat. On 17 November on the synthetic Tapeta track at Wolverhampton Racecourse the colt started 13/8 favourite for a novice race (for horses for no more than two previous wins) over nine and a half furlongs. Ridden as on his debut by Tom Marquand he tracked the leaders before taking the lead in the final furlong but was caught on the line and beaten a short head by the Roger Varian-trained Mackaar.
===2019: three-year-old season===
King of Change was ridden in all of his races as a three-year-old by Sean Levey. On his first appearance of the season in a novice race at Nottingham on 10 April he recorded his first success as he won by two and a half lengths from King Ademir and ten others. The colt was then stepped up sharply in class to contest the 2000 Guineas over the Rowley Mile at Newmarket Racecourse. Starting a 66/1 outsider he was in contention from the start and kept on well to finish second to Magna Grecia with Ten Sovereigns, Royal Marine and Advertise finishing behind.
After a break of over four months King of Change returned to the track in the Listed Fortune Stakes over one mile at Sandown Park on 16 September in which he was matched against older horses for the first time. After tracking the leaders he went to the front approaching the final furlong and won by one and a quarter lengths from Turgenev. On 19 October King of Change faced fifteen opponents in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes on heavy ground over the straight mile course at Ascot Racecourse. Benbatl started favourite while the other contenders included Magna Grecia, The Revenant (Prix Daniel Wildenstein), Lord Glitters, Accidental Agent, Phoenix of Spain and Veracious. King of Change raced in mid-division as Veracious set the pace before breaking through the pack to take the lead a furlong from the finish. Despite hanging to the left in the closing stages he kept on strongly to win by one and a quarter lengths from The Revenant. Sean Levey commented "When he ran in the Guineas people thought it was a bit of a fluke. But when he came in the autumn he was a massive stamp of a horse. We were worried about the ground but the way he's been working all he had to do was handle it. I said to Richard that I'd ridden Toronado and Sky Lantern at home and neither of them gave me a feel like him."
King of Change remained in training as a four-year-old but never returned to the track and was officially retired from racing in September 2020.
==Stud career==
King of Change began his career as a breeding stallion at the Derrinstown Stud in Ireland, standing at an initial stud fee of €7,000.
==Pedigree==
|
[
"Fractional odds",
"Ten Sovereigns",
"The Revenant (horse)",
"Nottingham Racecourse",
"Going (horse racing)",
"Tom Marquand",
"Champion Stakes",
"Sandown Park",
"Nureyev (horse)",
"Sky Lantern (horse)",
"Polar Falcon",
"Magna Grecia (horse)",
"Toronado (racehorse)",
"maiden race",
"Newmarket Racecourse",
"Horse length",
"Wolverhampton Racecourse",
"Advertise (horse)",
"Bay (horse)",
"Fortune Stakes",
"Racing Post",
"furlongs",
"Thoroughbred",
"Diomed Stakes",
"Dubai Millennium",
"Phoenix of Spain",
"Lockinge Stakes",
"Ascot Racecourse",
"Acatenango (horse)",
"Pivotal (horse)",
"Lando (horse)",
"Seeking The Gold",
"Slip Anchor",
"2000 Guineas",
"Listed race",
"Benbatl",
"Roger Varian",
"Lord Glitters",
"Synthetic racetrack surfaces for horse racing",
"Wiltshire",
"Arctic Tern (horse)",
"Sean Levey",
"Bering (horse)",
"Veracious (horse)",
"East Everleigh",
"Royal Marine (horse)",
"Sadler's Wells (horse)",
"Queen Elizabeth II Stakes",
"Richard Hannon Jr.",
"Blushing Groom",
"Cozzene",
"Farhh",
"Prix Daniel Wildenstein",
"Accidental Agent"
] |
62,105,560 |
Category:Films shot in Rhodes
|
Films shot in Rhodes.
|
[
"Rhodes"
] |
62,105,568 |
People and Places (song)
|
"People and Places" is a song written by French composer Eric Lévi, American singer Philip Bailey, and American songwriter Roxanne Seeman for the French film La Vengeance d'une Blonde. It is the end-credit song for the #1 French box office film starring Christian Clavier and starring Christian Clavier and Marie-Anne Chazel and scored by Levi. The song was recorded as a duet between Dee Dee Bridgewater and Philip Bailey and released as a single and 12" club mix by BMG France in 1994. The single, club mix, and instrumental versions appear on the soundtrack album. The single version was included as a bonus track on the Japanese release of Philip Bailey's solo album Philip Bailey.
== Background ==
Levi met Roxanne Seeman at the Warner/Chappell Music Paris office. After scoring Les Visiteurs and while working on his score for La Vengeance d'une Blonde Levi proposed writing a song with Seeman and Philip Bailey for the film.
== Recording ==
The recording of "People and Places" took place in Paris with Eric Lévi on keyboards and Philippe Manca on guitar. The vocals were recorded as a duet between Philip Bailey and Dee Dee Bridgewater, with Philip Bailey recording vocals in Los Angeles and Dee Dee Bridgewater recording her vocals in Paris. The final mix was at Studio Mega.
== Credits and personnel ==
Eric Levi – producer
Philip Bailey – lead vocal
Dee Dee Bridgewater – lead vocal
Philippe Manca – guitars
Frederick Rousseau - keyboards
Studio Mega – recording studio, Paris
|
[
"La Vengeance d'une blonde",
"Philip Bailey (album)",
"Eric Lévi",
"Les Visiteurs",
"Philip Bailey",
"Dee Dee Bridgewater",
"Bertelsmann Music Group",
"Roxanne Seeman",
"Christian Clavier",
"House music",
"Eric Levi",
"fr:Philippe Manca",
"Frederick Rousseau",
"Electronic music",
"Pop music",
"Warner Chappell Music"
] |
62,105,573 |
Category:Films shot in Thessaly
|
[] |
|
62,105,584 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Millie (short story)
|
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) 23:03, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Millie (short story)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
There aren't any reviews/analysis other than in somebody's blog. This is a test case, as the template at the bottom of the article shows lots more of these critters. Clarityfiend (talk) 19:44, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Literature-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 19:50, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This debate has been included in the Article Rescue Squadron's list of content for rescue consideration. 7&6=thirteen (☎) 21:08, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep "these critters" is one the classic modernist authors, a "Western canon" figure. I'm amazed but not surprised we need to defend a literary figure of this stature. As if there are not countless PhDs and critical works about Mansfield that any AfD nom should be checking for. Yes the articles need work (most articles do), but AfD isn't cleanup and anyone who knows anything about literature would know that Mansfield and her works are way beyond notability. -- GreenC 21:41, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
: Do you think it fits for from WP:BOOKCRIT? --MarioGom (talk) 23:49, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Merge all short stories by Katherine Mansfield into a single article titled Short stories by Katherine Mansfield. The individual titles can section-redirect to the appropriate points in the merged article. bd2412 T 22:03, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
You probably mean a "Bibliography" article (ie. ) for example Edgar Allan Poe bibliography, they usually link to standalone articles. There are no articles titled "Short stories by.." -- GreenC 23:21, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
There are plenty of articles titled "List of short stories by" - a pertinent example would be List of short stories by Ivan Bunin. bd2412 T 11:04, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Hmmm I searched for 'Short stories by.." but either way the "List of" format is similar to the Bibliography articles, each entry has a few sentences and optionally a link to the main article. The existence of lists doesn't preclude a longer treatment elsewhere or other way around. -- GreenC 19:06, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep. Meets WP:GNG certainly. Google Scholar as well as Google Books have plenty of leads, looks like WP:Before was not followed. Gleeanon409 (talk) 22:08, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment. Passing mentions of the story in articles about the author are not enough to establish notability for a standalone page. Please, see WP:BOOKCRIT. --MarioGom (talk) 23:22, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
True, however it’s quite obvious that “There aren't any reviews/analysis other than in somebody's blog” is patently false. If critical to this process, I’m sure some appropriate sources can be identified. And WP:RX can often get copies if not online. Gleeanon409 (talk) 23:41, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Merge as per GreenC. Notability is not inherited. This short story does not meet notability criteria. If not merge, then simply delete. Onel5969 TT me 04:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Speedy Keep The nomination starts with a clear falsehood as it is quite easy to find detailed coverage of the topic such as "Millie" (1913). Andrew D. (talk) 07:51, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect to Something Childish (which could be expanded with brief details of each story), or to a section in Katherine Mansfield (or the already-suggested bibliography article) if SC is also deleted or redirected. This article as it stands is a disgrace. Apart from publication details (and the recently added link to the text) and a plot summary (with no secondary sources), it contains only one short, unsourced sentence describing the writing style. Until my recent edit this sentence was in a section misleadingly titled "Literary significance" although the article made no claim of literary significance at all. This article is already poisoning the well in that the first page or so of google results link to multiple copies of it, thus the sooner the content is deleted the better. I have looked through the google results for this short story and most are indeed to blogspot or wordpress articles or similar. Of those, A Review of Katherine Mansfield’s “Short Stories” says that "Millie" is one of two of her short stories set in New Zealand both of which have a darker tone than her other stories, but illustrates this with a quote from the other story. There is also this Master's thesis which mentions "Millie" as "an early and interesting example of a story which hinges on a limiting situation" but has whole sections discussing other stories or topics. From this I deduce that "Millie" has no outstanding literary significance in its own right, and thus should not be a stand-alone article. (For an idea of what to expect, I also had a look at "The Birds" by Daphne du Maurier: it is clear that this, the only one of her short stories with its own article as far as I can see, is only an article because of Hitchcock's film, since it too makes no claim to literary significance and has no review sources.) --Mirokado (talk) 13:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Speedy keep Apparently some of you have evidently missed And there is more at Google books and Google Scholar. 7&6=thirteen (☎) 14:01, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment. A helpful soul at the Humanities Reference Desk has suggested the following as all helpful to the Style section at least:
Critical essays on Katherine Mansfield by Rhoda B. Nathan. G.K. Hall, 1993
The Development of a Consistent Structural Pattern in Katherine Mansfield's Short Stories, Volume 1. By Fred Stanley Madden. University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1978
MANSFIELD, MISOGYNY AND MURDER: 'OLE UNDERWOOD', 'THE WOMAN AT THE STORE' AND 'MILLIE' REVISITED. By Bruce Harding. Journal of New Zealand Literature (JNZL). No. 6 (1988), pp. 119-136
Kimber, G. (2010) “An art that strikes deeper”: Katherine Mansfield and Rhythm. Paper presented to: Poznon 2010: Second Bi-annual Conference of the European Network for Avant-Garde and Modernism Studies (EAM): High & Low, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland, 09-11 September 2010.
Katherine Mansfield and the (Post)colonial by Gerri Kimber, Edinburgh University Press, Sep. 16, 2013. Some quotes from this one below:
"Mansfield's early experimental, New Zealand regional stories - 'Millie', 'Ole Underwood'..."
"In essence, she forged the soul of her own race by exploring the dialectic between home and not-home, between New Zealand and England. Perhaps the most obvious contrast can be found in her story 'Millie' (1913), in which Mansfield contrasts an English print of Windsor Castle which depicts..."
"I suggest that among Mansfield's aims in stories like 'Millie' and 'The Woman at the Store', was to re-envision a nineteenth-century European settler society in crisis through the lens of modernist writing."
"...tier of the masculine outdoors (a form of landscape primitivism), and the feminised genteel interior (a morally civilising presence). These are compared to Mansfield's exhibition of take genteel interiors and imported artefacts in stories about the primitive frontier enfironment like 'Millie'..."
"What distinguishes Mansfield's literary evocations of New Zealand society and the world of middle-class childhood more specifically from the colonial text is her use of symbolism through which pioneer vulnerability and inherited social and cultural norms are delicately balanced, yet also deliberately exposed. In'Millie' this symbolism of an empire, dense with cultural artefacts, is represented in the language of the displaced, and in cultivation of the narrative moment."
I’m willing to follow-up and get copies of these if no one else is, WP:RX can provide these to anyone. Gleeanon409 (talk) 19:05, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep. See WP:Before, section C1: Seems fairly clear, given the availability of the sources mentioned above . MichaelMaggs (talk) 21:38, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep, meets WP:NBOOK, i may be going out on a limb here ("dont worry coola, the branch is strong enough!:)), but i reckon mansfield may be one of the writers where no. 5 applies ie. "5.The book's author is so historically significant that any of the author's written works may be considered notable.", sources mentioned above show that article can be expanded, as for "This article as it stands is a disgrace. ... the sooner the content is deleted the better..." (as well as "run little stubbies, before the big bad editors destroy you!), just a small reminder from WP:CONTN - "Notability is a property of a subject and not of a Wikipedia article.". Coolabahapple (talk) 04:38, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment And WP:Preserve 7&6=thirteen (☎) 11:17, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep per the excellent research into sources by Gleeanon409 and their Humanities librarian - if not per WP:NBOOK#5 as Coolabahapple suggests. (And, as I seem to find reason to comment too often, "google results" are not the way to assess notability of subjects which predate the internet - or even some which postdate it, if they're not the focus of online media.) RebeccaGreen (talk) 12:14, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep per everyone above. Her stature as an author makes her works pass WP:NBOOK#5.4meter4 (talk) 12:34, 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.
|
[
"Short stories by Katherine Mansfield",
"List of short stories by Ivan Bunin",
"WP:Preserve",
"Wikipedia talk:WikiProject LGBT studies",
"Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Literature",
"The Birds (film)",
"Bloomsbury Publishing",
"Talk:Katherine Mansfield",
"WP:CONTN",
"WP:Before",
"WP:GNG",
"Something Childish",
"WP:NBOOK",
"Edgar Allan Poe bibliography",
"Daphne du Maurier",
"The Birds (story)",
"WP:RX",
"Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Women writers",
"WP:BOOKCRIT",
"Millie (short story)",
"Western canon",
"Katherine Mansfield",
"Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Women's History"
] |
62,105,588 |
Category:Films shot in Corfu
|
[] |
|
62,105,590 |
File:Yıkılmayan Adam.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,593 |
Ellen Crocker
|
Ellen Crocker (1872–1962) was an English suffragette.
== Life and activism ==
Ellen Crocker (also known as Nelly or Nellie) was born in 1872 in Stogumber, Somerset. Her father was a doctor, and she had a sister, Emma Crocker. Her cousins were WSPU treasurer Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence and Dorothy Pethick.
Crocker joined the suffragette movement but left when her cousin Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence and husband Frederick were expelled from the Women's Social and Political Union by the Pankhurts.
In 1906, Crocker was a strong Liberal Party supporter, honorary secretary to the Wellington's Women's Liberal Association but became disillusioned in 1907 and left the party of 'a Government which persecutes women' to join the campaign for women's suffrage to avoid being a 'traitor to her sex'. and was the first suffragette prisoner to stay at Emily Blathwayt's Eagle House. She eventually planted a tree at Annie's Arboretum on a later visit in February 1911, to commemorate her imprisonment suffering (an Abies magnifica). She helped WPSU campaigns at seven by-elections, once having a driver with an iron bar for protection in his vehicle. as Nottingham organiser by Charlotte Marsh. Crocker was arrested with fellow activists in 1909 including at the House of Commons and at a meeting of Winston Churchill in Leicester. eight times for suffragette activism and on 1 March 1912 went to Holloway Prison to serve three months with hard labour. Her crime was breaking the Post Office windows with Nellie Taylor in Kings Road. In Bow Street court she explained her actions were against police brutality following the events on Black Friday when women protestors were violently abused and assaulted, leaving a 'dark shadow'. She also objected to the severe sentences for Alan MacDougall and William Ball.
Crocker took part in the play An Allegory by Vera Wentworth once whilst in Holloway, and played the part, Fear.The Museum of London has a postcard of Crocker with Theresa Garrett, Gladys Roberts and Edith New at the Hawick by-election.
Crocker died in Maida Vale in 1962, leaving the residue of her estate to the Suffragette Fellowship.
|
[
"Abies magnifica",
"Women's Social and Political Union",
"Charlotte Marsh",
"Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, Baroness Pethick-Lawrence",
"Emily Blathwayt",
"Newton Abbot",
"House of Commons of the United Kingdom",
"Leicester",
"Yorkshire",
"Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence",
"suffragette",
"Rachel Barrett",
"Aeta Lamb",
"Hyde Park, London",
"William Ball (suffragist)",
"HM Prison Holloway",
"The Suffragette Handkerchief",
"Force-feeding",
"Emmeline Pankhurst",
"Sheffield",
"Winston Churchill in politics, 1900–1939",
"Ethel Smyth",
"Nellie Martel",
"Conservative Party (UK)",
"hunger strike",
"Somerset",
"the Suffragette Fellowship",
"Eagle House (suffragette's rest)",
"King's Road",
"Edith New",
"Bath, Somerset",
"Bow Street Magistrates' Court",
"Nottingham",
"Helen Watts (suffragette)",
"Vera Wentworth",
"Louisa Garrett Anderson",
"Nellie Taylor",
"Girton College, Cambridge",
"Dorothy Pethick",
"General Post Office",
"Mid Devon",
"Liberal Party (UK)"
] |
62,105,595 |
Category:Films shot in Lesbos
|
[] |
|
62,105,596 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Bharat Gaurav International Achievement Award
|
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. Over three weeks now with no evident consensus on what to do with this article. RL0919 (talk) 00:41, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Bharat Gaurav International Achievement Award===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Can find no independent RS coverage. Current sources seem to be press releases or self-published. There is a bit of coverage for one or more similarly named awards which seem to be unrelated (e.g. this story about a Bharat Gaurav award given by a football team to one of its players). AFAICT "Bharat Gaurav" means something like "Pride of India" in Hindi, so it could well be used for several awards. But the exact title, "Bharat Gaurav International Achievement Award", gets 0 google news hits, and a small number of results from a web search, mostly wiki mirrors. Also, current content is pretty egregiously promotional. Before recent additions, it was just a 2-sentence stub. Colin M (talk) 19:46, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of India-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 21:43, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep but strip back to the December 2018 version before the entire entry criteria were copied in and loads of junky sources added. Judging from who gives the awards and who else is present the awards seem notable. Coverage is modest, but there’s enough to sustain a stub for now. Mccapra (talk) 06:39, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
To my eye, the sources on the earlier stub version are also 'junky', or at least fall short of WP:SIGCOV. In order, I see 1) BollywoodHeadlines, which by their 'About Us' section seems to be a blog/user-generated content. 2) Primary source. 3) Photo gallery 4) Literally just a headline. Colin M (talk) 19:59, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Stubify per Mccapra.4meter4 (talk) 12:32, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, North America1000 16:46, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Events-related deletion discussions. North America1000 19:21, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete a total lack of coverage that shows notability.John Pack Lambert (talk) 16:00, 2 November 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, – Joe (talk) 13:16, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Note that I've stubified it and kept the sources. Going through them now to see if GNG might be met, looks promising based on the national nature of the publications. JamieWhat (talk) 15:15, 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.
|
[
"Bharat Gaurav International Achievement Award",
"WP:SIGCOV"
] |
62,105,597 |
2020–21 ISU Junior Grand Prix
|
The 2020–21 ISU Junior Grand Prix would have been a series of junior international competitions organized by the International Skating Union to be held from August 2020 through December 2020. It would have been the junior-level complement to the 2020–21 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating. On July 20, 2020, the ISU officially cancelled the JGP series due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
== Reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic ==
On May 1, 2020, the International Skating Union established a working group, chaired by ISU Vice-president for Figure Skating Alexander Lakernik, to monitor the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Its responsibilities included determining the feasibility of holding events as scheduled, possibly behind closed doors, during the first half of the 2020–21 season, and the financial impact of any potential cancellations. The ISU announced that a host federation must make a decision regarding potential cancellation of their event at latest twelve weeks prior to the event.
On May 16, 2020, the Slovak Figure Skating Association informed the ISU that it had cancelled all events that it was scheduled to host due to the ongoing pandemic, including the second event of the JGP series in Košice. On May 26, Skate Canada cancelled the first event of the JGP series that it was originally scheduled to host in Richmond, British Columbia. On July 3, the Japan Skating Federation cancelled its event in Shin-Yokohama, originally scheduled to be the fourth in the series.
The Japan Skating Federation announced on July 13 that it would not assign any skaters to the Junior Grand Prix, assuming the competitions proceeded as scheduled.
On July 13, the ISU announced major changes to the JGP format, including:
No ISU Junior Grand Prix points would be awarded and no ISU Junior Grand Prix Ranking for 2020/21 would be established.
There would be no pre-allocated entries for ISU members to participate in each Junior Grand Prix event and ISU members could choose the events in which they would enter their skaters.
On July 20, the ISU officially cancelled all events of the series, citing increased travel and entry requirements between countries and potentially excessive sanitary and health care costs for hosting members.
The entire series was cancelled on July 20.
This season, the series would have been composed of the following events.
|
[
"2020–21 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final",
"Japan Skating Federation",
"COVID-19 pandemic",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Slovakia",
"Riga",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Latvia",
"2021–22 ISU Junior Grand Prix",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in the Czech Republic",
"International Skating Union",
"Košice",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Canada",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Japan",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Slovenia",
"2019–20 ISU Junior Grand Prix",
"Shin-Yokohama",
"Slovakia",
"Skate Canada",
"2020–21 figure skating season",
"2020–21 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating",
"Inside the Games",
"Latvia",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix",
"ISU Junior Grand Prix in Hungary",
"Richmond, British Columbia"
] |
62,105,600 |
Category:Films shot in Kavala
|
[] |
|
62,105,601 |
Gamphani Lungu
|
Gamphani Jones Lungu (born 19 September 1998) is a Zambian footballer who plays as a forward for DTSV Primership club SuperSport United F.C. and the Zambia national football team.
|
[
"South African Premier Division",
"Forward (association football)",
"SuperSport United F.C.",
"Lusaka",
"Power Dynamos F.C.",
"Zambia",
"Zambia national football team"
] |
62,105,605 |
Abadiya bint Ali
|
Khadija Abdiya bint Ali (1907 – 14 July 1958) was an Iraqi princess. She was the daughter of Ali, King of Hejaz, and Princess Nafissa, sister of Crown Prince 'Abd al-Ilah, and the aunt of King Faisal II of Iraq. She was murdered in the massacre of the royal family during the 14 July Revolution.
==Life==
She spend her childhood in Mecca. Her father was deposed in 1924, and she followed her family in exile to Iraq, were her uncle had been made king in 1921.
Her brother 'Abd al-Ilah served as regent of Iraq for their nephew king Faisal II when her became king as a minor in 1939. When her sister queen Aliya bint Ali died in 1950, she was asked to act as a mother figure for the king. She never married, was described as somewhat Spartan, and devoted herself to supervising the palace staff.
On 14 July 1958, the Royal Al-Rehab Palace in Baghdad, was attacked by the rebels during the 14 July Revolution. When the defenders of the palace realized they were vastly overnumbered, and that it would be impossible to defend the royal family, they agreed to hand them over to the rebels, who stated that they would transport them to custody in the Ministry of Defense. The royal family, consisting of the king, the crown prince, Princess Hiyam, Princess Nafissa (mother of the crown prince), and Princess Abadiya (the king's aunt), as well as some members of the royal staff, left the palace via the kitchen. When passing the kitchen garden through a row of rebel soldiers, the soldiers opened fire. The king was hit in the head and neck, while the crown prince, Nafissa and Abadiya were all hit in the back, and Hiyam in the leg or hip. The rebels had agreed that the crown prince and the prime minister should be killed, but there had been different opinions as what to do with the king, and no decisions at all in regard to the female members of the family.
After the massacre, the bodies were taken to cars to be transported to the Ministry of Defense. The king, Abadiya, and Hiyam were reportedly still alive, but the king died during the trip. The cars stopped, and the bodies of the king and the crown prince were taken out, the former being hanged, the latter being defiled and dragged through the streets.
|
[
"Baghdad",
"Al-Rehab Palace",
"Mecca",
"'Abd al-Ilah",
"Aliya bint Ali",
"Ottoman Empire",
"Faisal II of Iraq",
"14 July Revolution",
"Ali of Hejaz",
"Nafissa Khanum",
"Ali, King of Hejaz",
"Kingdom of Iraq",
"Princess Hiyam",
"Hashemites"
] |
62,105,607 |
2021 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship
|
The 2021 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship (also known as UEFA Women's Under-19 Euro 2021) was originally to be held as the 20th edition of the UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship (24th edition if the Under-18 era is included), the annual international youth football championship organised by UEFA for the women's under-19 national teams of Europe. Belarus were originally to host the tournament between 21 July and 2 August 2021. A total of eight teams were originally to play in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2002 eligible to participate. On 23 February 2021, UEFA announced that the tournament was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.
Same as previous editions held in odd-numbered years, the tournament would have acted as the UEFA qualifiers for the FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup. The top four teams of the tournament would have qualified for the 2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Costa Rica as the UEFA representatives. With the cancellation of the tournament, the UEFA Executive Committee nominated the four teams with the highest coefficient ranking at the time for the qualifying draw (Spain, France, Germany and the Netherlands) as UEFA representatives for the World Cup.
France would have been the defending champions, having won the last tournament held in 2019, with the 2020 edition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. For that reason, UEFA announced on 23 February 2021 that this tournament was also cancelled.
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 Women's Under-19 Championship final tournaments of 2021 and 2022, Belarus and Czech Republic were selected as hosts respectively. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, UEFA announced on 13 August 2020 that after consultation with the 55 member associations, the qualifying round was delayed to February 2021, and the elite round was abolished and replaced by play-offs, supposed to be contested in April 2021 by the 12 qualifying round group winners, the best runners-up, and the top seed by coefficient ranking, Spain (which originally received a bye to the elite round), to determine the teams qualifying for the final tournament.
===Qualified teams===
The following teams qualified for the final tournament.
Note: All appearance statistics include only U-19 era (since 2002).
==Qualified teams for FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup==
The following four teams from UEFA qualified for the 2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.
1 Bold indicates champions for that year. Italic indicates hosts for that year.
|
[
"association football",
"2014 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"2021 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship qualification",
"Costa Rica",
"2018 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup",
"UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship",
"2019 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Spain women's national under-20 football team",
"2012 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"Spain women's national under-19 football team",
"France women's national under-19 football team",
"France women's national under-20 football team",
"UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Germany women's national under-20 football team",
"2010 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"2020 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2006 FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship",
"2002 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship",
"UEFA",
"UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"2022 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"2016 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"Ljubljana",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Europe",
"Belarus",
"2022 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2009 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship",
"FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup",
"Netherlands women's national under-20 football team"
] |
62,105,608 |
File:King Thomas Joseph.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,105,610 |
File:Hay Mills Rotor Station - 1951.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"Hay Mills Rotor Station",
"British European Airways",
"Westland WS-51 Dragonfly"
] |
62,105,613 |
File:Arabesk movie poster.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,105,616 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Well-Strung
|
[
"Barack Obama",
"Template:Did you know nominations/Clara Schumann",
"The Amazing Race",
"Vatican City",
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"Well-Strung",
"Hillary Clinton",
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}",
"Stacy's Mom"
] |
|
62,105,621 |
Category:1823 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,622 |
1983 German Open
|
The 1983 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 1983 Grand Prix circuit. It was the 75th edition of the event and took place from 9 May through 14 May 1983. Sixth-seeded Yannick Noah won the singles title.
==Finals==
===Singles===
Yannick Noah defeated José Higueras, 3–6, 7–5, 6–2, 6–0
It was Noah's 2nd singles title of the year and the 13th of his career.
===Doubles===
Heinz Günthardt / Balázs Taróczy defeated Mark Edmondson / Brian Gottfried, 7–6, 4–6, 6–4
|
[
"José Higueras",
"Mark Edmondson",
"Clay court",
"Brian Gottfried",
"clay court",
"Heinz Günthardt",
"Hamburg",
"Grand Prix tennis circuit",
"tennis",
"Grand Prix German Open",
"Am Rothenbaum",
"Balázs Taróczy",
"1983 Grand Prix (tennis)",
"Yannick Noah"
] |
62,105,623 |
Category:1826 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,624 |
Category:1828 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,625 |
Category:1839 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,627 |
Category:1856 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,630 |
Category:1867 establishments in Peru
|
[] |
|
62,105,634 |
2022 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship
|
The 2022 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship (also known as UEFA Women's Under-19 Euro 2022) was the 19th edition of the UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship (23rd edition if the Under-18 era is included), the annual international youth football championship organised by UEFA for the women's under-19 national teams of Europe. The Czech Republic hosted the tournament. A total of eight teams played in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2003 eligible to participate.
France 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. France was eliminated in the semifinals.
==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 Women's Under-19 Championship final tournaments of 2021 and 2022, Belarus and Czech Republic were selected as hosts respectively. The qualifying competition will be played in two rounds, with teams divided into two leagues, and promotion and relegation between leagues after each round similar to the UEFA Nations League.
A record total of 52 (out of 55) UEFA nations entered the qualifying competition, with the hosts Czech Republic also competing despite already qualifying automatically, and seven teams will qualify for the final tournament at the end of round 2 to join the hosts. The draw for round 1 was held on 11 March 2021, 15:00 CET (UTC+1), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.
===Qualified teams===
The following eight teams qualified for the final tournament.
==Squads==
Each national team have to submit a squad of 20 players, two of whom had to be goalkeepers (Regulations Article 43.01).
==Group stage==
The group winners and runners-up advanced to the semi-finals.
Tiebreakers
In the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 20.01 and 20.02):
===Group A===
----
----
===Group B===
----
----
==Knockout stage==
In the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out will be used to decide the winner if necessary.
===Bracket===
===Semi-finals===
----
===Final===
==Goalscorers==
|
[
"Nesrine Bahlouli",
"Matilda Vinberg",
"UEFA Nations League",
"Městský stadion (Karviná)",
"2007 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Iris Omarsdottir",
"Judith Coquet",
"2012 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"UEFA European Under-19 Championship",
"Cathinka Tandberg",
"2020 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Stovky",
"2003 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Jorja Fox (footballer)",
"UEFA European Under-17 Championship",
"2013 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2008 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2015 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2006 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Europe",
"2014 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Ane Elexpuru",
"Penalty shoot-out (association football)",
"UTC+01:00",
"2011 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Stadion v Městských sadech",
"2009 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Hungarian Football Federation",
"Grace Clinton",
"2016 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Městský stadion (Ostrava)",
"Polish Football Association",
"2019 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Éloïse Sévenne",
"2018 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2017 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"2021 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Elma Nelhage",
"Opava",
"Frýdek-Místek",
"UEFA",
"Sofie Zdebel",
"Croatian Football Federation",
"Czech Republic",
"Bazaly",
"Chiara Beccari",
"Nicole Arcangeli",
"Sarah Mattner-Trembleau",
"Mirari Uria",
"Clara Pinedo",
"UTC+02:00",
"Central European Time",
"Victoria Della Peruta",
"2005 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Silvia Lloris",
"Portuguese Football Federation",
"2022 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship qualification",
"Royal Dutch Football Association",
"Júlia Bartel",
"2022 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship qualification",
"2023 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship",
"Romanian Football Federation",
"Points (association football)",
"2004 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"France women's national under-19 football team",
"Noémie Mouchon",
"Louna Ribadeira",
"Lucía Moral",
"Nyon",
"Carmen Álvarez",
"2010 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Central European Summer Time",
"Association football",
"Fiamma (footballer)",
"Oda Mathilde Johansen",
"Aggie Beever-Jones",
"Ornella Vignola",
"Goal difference",
"Ljubljana",
"Ostrava",
"2002 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship",
"Inès Benyahia",
"Karviná"
] |
62,105,639 |
Category:Religion in music by religion
|
This category includes popular music that features themes and subjects from specific religious traditions.
|
[] |
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