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62,107,988
The Best of Pentatonix Christmas
The Best of Pentatonix Christmas is the first compilation album by American a cappella group Pentatonix. It contains Christmas songs, originally recorded for and included on their holiday albums PTXmas, That's Christmas to Me, A Pentatonix Christmas and Christmas Is Here!, as well as four new songs: "Do You Hear What I Hear?", "God Only Knows", "Joyful, Joyful", and "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch". It was released via RCA Records on October 25, 2019. In December 2019, the group toured the United States in support of the album. == Track listing == "Deck the Halls" (solos by Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, and Kirstin Maldonado) – 2:46 "Carol of the Bells" (entirely lead sung by Mitch Grassi) – 3:15 "God Only Knows" (solos by Mitch Grassi, Scott Hoying, Kirstin Maldonado, Matt Sallee, and Kevin Olusola) – 2:48 "Hallelujah" (solos by Scott Hoying, Avi Kaplan, Kirstin Maldonado, and Mitch Grassi) – 4:29 "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" – 2:07 "Mary, Did You Know?" (solos by Scott Hoying, Avi Kaplan, Kirstin Maldonado, Mitch Grassi, and Kevin Olusola) – 3:22 "Joyful Joyful" (featuring Jazmine Sullivan) (solos by Jazmine Sullivan, Kevin Olusola, Matt Sallee, and Mitch Grassi) – 3:54 "Do You Hear What I Hear?" (featuring Whitney Houston) (entirely lead sung by Whitney Houston) – 3:33 "Little Drummer Boy" (solos by Avi Kaplan, Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, Kirstin Maldonado, and Kevin Olusola) – 4:13 "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" (solos by Mitch Grassi and Kirstin Maldonado) – 2:29 "Winter Wonderland/Don't Worry Be Happy" (featuring Tori Kelly) (solos by Scott Hoying and Tori Kelly) – 3:27 "White Winter Hymnal" – 2:47 "Grown-Up Christmas List" (featuring Kelly Clarkson) (entirely lead sung by Kelly Clarkson) – 4:42 "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" (entirely lead sung by Matt Sallee) – 3:00 "When You Believe" (featuring Maren Morris) (solos by Maren Morris and Scott Hoying) – 3:52 "Here Comes Santa Claus" (solos by Kirstin Maldonado, Scott Hoying, and Matt Sallee) – 2:36 "How Great Thou Art" (featuring Jennifer Hudson) (solos by Jennifer Hudson and Scott Hoying) – 4:09 "That's Christmas to Me" (solos by Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, and Avi Kaplan) – 3:02 "Coldest Winter" (Bobby Alt Drum Mix) (solos by Kirstin Maldonado and Mitch Grassi) – 2:28 == Personnel == Scott Hoying – producer, baritone lead and backing vocals, and bass backing vocals on "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" Mitch Grassi – producer, tenor lead and backing vocals Kirstin Maldonado – producer, soprano lead and backing vocals Matt Sallee – producer, bass lead and backing vocals, and lead vocals on "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" Kevin Olusola – producer, vocal percussion, beatboxing, lead vocals on "God Only Knows", and rapping on "Joyful, Joyful" ==Charts== ===Weekly charts=== ===Year-end charts===
[ "Don't Worry Be Happy", "Little Drummer Boy", "Avi Kaplan", "Kirstin Maldonado", "Jazmine Sullivan", "Christmas music", "Do You Hear What I Hear?", "RCA Records", "Carol of the Bells", "Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen song)", "Mitch Grassi", "Jennifer Hudson", "Tori Kelly", "The Hymn of Joy", "Deck the Halls", "Scott Hoying", "Matt Sallee", "a cappella", "Maren Morris", "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy", "Whitney Houston", "List of Billboard Top Holiday Albums number ones of the 2020s", "AllMusic", "How Great Thou Art", "Hymn of Joy", "White Winter Hymnal", "Coldest Winter (song)", "That's Christmas to Me (song)", "List of Billboard Top Holiday Albums number ones of the 2010s", "When You Believe", "Grown-Up Christmas List", "Pentatonix", "Kelly Clarkson", "PTXmas", "Idolator (website)", "compilation album", "Kevin Olusola", "Christmas Is Here!", "Billboard (magazine)", "Winter Wonderland", "A capella", "God Only Knows", "Mary, Did You Know?", "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen", "That's Christmas to Me", "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch", "A Pentatonix Christmas", "Here Comes Santa Claus" ]
62,107,990
M Hamid
M Hamid () is a Bangladeshi dramatist and theatre personality. He served as the director general of Bangladesh Television from March 2012 until April 2014. He is a former chief executive officer of RTV, a Bangladeshi satellite television channel. He served as the founding president of the theatrical group Natyachakra. Hamid was awarded 2018 Shilpakala Padak in dramatics by the government of Bangladesh. ==Early life== Hamid was a student of Jagannath College. He served as a Dhaka University Central Students' Union (DUCSU) cultural secretary. In 2011, he joined as a managing director of Bangladesh Film Development Corporation (FDC) and went on to become its director general until he left the position in 2012. Hamid served as the chairperson and president of Bangladesh Group Theatre Federation (BGTF). He was an executive member of Shammilito Shangskritik Jote (SSJ). Hamid was awarded Badruddin Hossain Memorial Award by Padatik Natya Sangsad. ==Personal life== Hamid is married to Falguni Hamid (née Roy Chowdhury), a retired television and stage actress, since 24 December 1978. Together they have a daughter, Tonima Hamid. Among Hamid's five brothers, K. M. Khalid is a former State Minister of Cultural Affairs and actor Mahmud Sajjad (d. 2021).
[ "Bangladesh Film Development Corporation", "Jagannath College", "Bangladesh Television", "RTV (Bangladeshi TV channel)", "Shilpakala Padak", "Dhaka University Central Students' Union", "Ministry of Cultural Affairs (Bangladesh)", "Tonima Hamid", "Falguni Hamid", "government of Bangladesh", "K. M. Khalid", "Bangladeshi" ]
62,107,991
Category:2016 establishments in Namibia
[]
62,108,002
Category:Algerian people of Czech descent
[]
62,108,023
Category:Oceanian people of African-American descent
[]
62,108,131
Category:1479 in military history
[]
62,108,142
Category:1470s in military history
[]
62,108,157
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in South Korea
[]
62,108,163
Category:Quincy College faculty
[]
62,108,169
File:RWC Women's logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,108,170
Category:Women's field hockey in Slovakia
[]
62,108,181
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Italy
[]
62,108,182
Category:Saint Kitts and Nevis people of African American descent
[]
62,108,183
Category:Women's field hockey in Switzerland
[]
62,108,203
Category:Earthquakes in the Roman Empire
Earthquakes in the Roman Empire.
[ "Roman Empire", "Earthquake" ]
62,108,213
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Ireland
[]
62,108,226
323rd Army Band
The 323rd Army Band "Fort Sam's Own" is a United States Army military band currently based at Fort Sam Houston/Joint Base San Antonio in San Antonio, Texas. It is attached to United States Army North of which it is the primary ensemble. It is designed to be a command-level support asset and consists of 62 personnel. It is one of two bands based at JBSA (the other being the Air Force Band of the West) and is one of many bands that have existed since their inception in the city in 1893. ==History== It was activated in 1942 at Carlisle Barracks in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which is now the site of the U.S. Army War College. At its founding, it was originally known as the Medical Field Service School Band until 1944 when it was designated the 323rd Army Service Forces Band. Two years later, the took part in a large move along two medical schools to Texas where it founded and was stationed at Fort Sam Houston, which the army designated as the principal military medical training facility, earning it the nickname of the "Home of Army Medicine". In 1975, the band was redesignated as the 5th Army Band and on 22 July 2004, was renamed to the United States Army Medical Command Band (MEDCOM Band). Its final performance as the Medical Command Band took place on 13 October 2011 at San Antonio's Blesse Auditorium, before being officially reorganized as "Fort Sam's Own" 6 days later. In the summer of 2016, the United States Department of the Army listed Fort Sam's Band as one of the bands that will be dissolved due to a reorganization of army bands in the Armed Forces. In April 2018, Lieutenant General Jeffrey Buchanan of U.S. Army North, said that the order to dissolve the band was reversed by the Department of Defense after a rise in dissenting voices opposed to the decision. By mid-May, the band was confirmed to have been removed from the list of bands being dissolved and continued its activities with the previous orders to dissolve it still in effect, which as a result, caused the personnel count to go down to 16. ==Activities and performances== In addition to its military duties at JBSA, the band moreover performs in the local community and the surrounding area. The band also aides band programs annually at schools in the San Antonio area including the East Central Independent School District and the San Antonio Independent School District. In 2017, the band opened the annual Houston Thanksgiving Day Parade. Members of the then-MEDCOM Band were the center of a 2013 study which concluded that musicians have a high rate of Musculoskeletal disorders, which is an injury to the human musculoskeletal system. ===Supporting ensembles=== There are several supporting ensembles that add to the musical style of the band: Ceremonial Band Marching Band Concert Band “Intrepid Winds” Woodwind Quintet “Biohazard Brass Band” (New Orleans-style) "After 5" Jazz Combo “35 to Nowhere” Rock band "Mission Brass Quintet”
[ "San Antonio Independent School District", "United States Department of Defense", "Jazz Combo", "United States Air Force", "Rock band", "Fort Sam Houston", "Joint Base San Antonio", "United States Department of the Army", "United States military bands", "East Central Independent School District", "United States Army Medical Command", "Marching Band", "YouTube", "Public duties", "Texas", "medical school", "Fort Bragg", "U.S. Army War College", "San Antonio, Texas", "United States Army North", "Military Intelligence Corps Band", "military band", "United States Armed Forces", "Military band", "Carlisle Barracks", "human musculoskeletal system", "United States Army", "Musculoskeletal disorder", "Signal Corps Band", "Superior Unit Award", "Carlisle, Pennsylvania" ]
62,108,227
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Armenia
[]
62,108,230
John Natale
John Natale is an American soccer coach, and current head coach for the Hartford Hawks women's soccer team. Before becoming the head coach at Hartford, Natale was an assistant for the Boston Breakers, and an assistant at Hartford in 2000. ==Coaching career== Natale served as an assistant at Hartford during the 2000 season, where the team posted a 17–4 record, losing to Harvard in the second round of the NCAA tournament. In his third season at Hartford, Natale led the team to a 10–9–2 record and a berth in the NCAA tournament. At Hartford he has won one conference tournament and five regular season championships. In 2015 Natale was inducted into the Connecticut Soccer coaches Hall of Fame. In 2011, Natale served as a scout for the United States women's national team under head coach Pia Sundhage at the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. A year later, he again rejoined the staff as a video analysis coach for the team at the Olympic football tournament. ==Head coaching record== †NCAA canceled 2020 collegiate activities due to the COVID-19 virus.
[ "2019 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "United States women's national soccer team", "Wethersfield, Connecticut", "Pia Sundhage", "2011 FIFA Women's World Cup", "2017 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament", "2022 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "Eastern Connecticut State University", "2020 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "2014 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "Hartford Hawks", "2006 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament", "2021 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "2016 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "Commonwealth Coast Conference", "Conference of New England", "America East", "America East Conference", "2018 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "2015 NCAA Division I women's soccer season", "Boston Breakers" ]
62,108,242
Flamur
Flamur is an Albanian masculine given name, taken from the Albanian word flamur, meaning "flag". Notable people bearing the name Flamur include: Flamur Bajrami (born 1997), Kosovar footballer Flamur Dzelili (born 1999), Swedish professional footballer Flamur Kastrati (born 1991), Kosovar footballer Flamur Noka (born 1971), Albanian politician, former Minister of the Interior Flamur Ruçi (born 2002), Albanian footballer Flamur Tairi (born 1990), Macedonian-Albanian footballer
[ "Flamur Tairi", "Albania", "Flamur Bajrami", "given name", "Flamur Kastrati", "Flamur Dzelili", "Flamur Ruçi", "flag", "Albanian language", "Flamur Noka" ]
62,108,254
A Certain Scientific Railgun season 3
The third season of the Japanese animated television series A Certain Scientific Railgun, marketed as A Certain Scientific Railgun T, is based on the manga series of the same name written by Kazuma Kamachi and illustrated by . The season follows Mikoto Misaka teaming up with Misaki Shokuhō to stop the plans of Academy City's dark side during Daihasei Festival. Produced by J.C.Staff, the season was directed by Tatsuyuki Nagai with series composition supervised by Shōgo Yasukawa. A Certain Scientific Railgun T sees the return of the main cast members Rina Satō, Satomi Arai, Aki Toyosaki, and Kanae Itō. Azumi Asakura joins them as Shokuhō, whom she also voiced in the first and final episodes of A Certain Scientific Railgun S. Production of the third season was announced in October 2018, with Nagai returning as the director. Yasukawa was confirmed as the head of series composition for the season in September 2019. The third season consists of 25 episodes and ran on AT-X from January 10 to September 25, 2020, with other networks following days later. Several episodes got delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused the season to conclude a full three months later than originally scheduled. The series was announced to be renewed for a fourth season in February 2025. __TOC__ == Episodes == == Cast and characters == === Main === === Recurring === == Production == === Development and writing === During the Dengeki Bunko 25th Anniversary Fall Dengeki Festival event in October 2018, an untitled third season of A Certain Scientific Railgun television series was announced, with Tatsuyuki Nagai confirming his return to direct at J.C.Staff. Kazuma Kamachi, the creator of A Certain Magical Index series, and light novel editor Kazuma Miki revealed in November 2018 that the series was slated to be released in 2019 along with A Certain Scientific Accelerator television series, but it was delayed to January 2020. In September 2019, staff members from the previous season were confirmed to be returning for the series, including character animation designer Yuichi Tanaka, art director Kentaro Izumi, and cinematographer Shingo Fukuyo, with Shogo Yasukawa handling the series composition. The title of the series was revealed in the same month to be A Certain Scientific Railgun T. The series' premiere date was revealed in November 2019 to be on January 10, 2020, and it would consist of twenty-five episodes. The Daihasei Festival story arc from A Certain Scientific Railgun manga series were adapted into the first half of the series, while the sixteenth episode onwards were based on the Dream Ranker arc. === Casting === With the announcement of a third season in October 2018, Rina Satō, Satomi Arai, Aki Toyosaki, Kanae Itō, and Azumi Asakura were also confirmed to reprise their respective roles as Mikoto Misaka, Kuroko Shirai, Kazari Uiharu, Ruiko Saten, and Misaki Shokuhō. In February 2020, Konomi Kohara joined the cast as Dolly, as did Atsumi Tanezaki in April as Ryōko Kuriba / Doppelganger. while the ending theme music is "Nameless Story" by Kishida Kyoudan & The Akeboshi Rockets. From episode 16 onwards, the opening theme music is "Dual Existence" by fripSide, while the ending theme music is by sajou no hana. == Marketing == A full promotional video for A Certain Scientific Railgun T was released in December 2019. The series had the Daihaseisai guidebook and Mikoto Style booklet, which were given for free at the 97th Comiket. EJ Anime Hotel in Tokorozawa used the series as a theme in one of its rooms, which was opened by October 2020. Promotional partners for the series included Atré and Animate stores in Akihabara. == Release == === Broadcast === A Certain Scientific Railgun T began airing in Japan on AT-X, Tokyo MX, BS11, and MBS on January 10, 2020. === Home media === A Certain Scientific Railgun T was simulcast on the Japanese streaming website AbemaTV. Hulu released it in Japan on March 24, 2022. NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan released the first Blu-ray and DVD volumes on April 30, 2020, and the eighth and final volumes on December 25. They contain a bonus novel written by Kamachi titled A Certain Magical Index SS: Agnese's Magic Side Work Experience, A bonus two-track drama CD could be received when all eight volumes were purchased on Amazon Japan website. Funimation released the first volume set in North America on March 2, 2021, while the second volume set was released on June 29. Crunchyroll released the season on Blu-ray in North America on April 8, 2025, and will release it in the United Kingdom on May 5.
[ "Atsushi Abe", "Mitsuko Kongō", "Toma Kamijo", "Haruka Tomatsu", "COVID-19 pandemic", "Hulu", "manga", "Emi Shinohara", "Minami Tsuda", "AT-X (TV network)", "Shōgo Yasukawa", "Junko Hokaze", "Aki Toyosaki", "Kishida Kyoudan & The Akeboshi Rockets", "Akane Fujita", "Blu-ray", "Crunchyroll", "Mitori Kōzaku", "Kana Ueda", "List of A Certain Magical Index characters", "Mii Konori", "Nippon BS Broadcasting", "Saiai Kinuhata", "theme music", "Anime", "Miyu Tomita", "NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan", "Maaya Awatsuki", "Anime News Network", "Kiyoko Sayama", "A Certain Scientific Railgun S", "series composition", "Mainichi Broadcasting System", "Binbin Takaoka", "Tokorozawa", "Misuzu Misaka", "Mikoto Misaka", "Tokyo MX", "Amazon Japan", "Kazari Uiharu", "Yuka Nukui", "Tokorozawa Sakura Town", "Kinuho Wannai", "Shizuri Mugino", "drama CD", "Rina Satō", "Aoi Koga", "Funimation", "Misaki Shokuhou", "Katsushi Sakurabi", "Kuroko Shirai", "Comiket", "fripSide", "ComicBook.com", "simulcast", "A Certain Magical Index", "Tatsuyuki Nagai", "Kazuma Miki", "A Certain Scientific Accelerator (TV series)", "Crunchyroll News", "Ruiko Saten", "Atsumi Tanezaki", "AbemaTV", "Animate (retailer)", "Yoshiki Yamakawa", "Pierce Aogami", "Maaya Uchida", "light novel", "Frenda Seivelun", "Azumi Asakura", "Minako Kotobuki", "Hitomi Ōwada", "Gensei Kihara", "Akihabara", "J.C.Staff", "DVD", "Nozomi Sasaki (voice actress)", "Kazuma Kamachi", "Teitoku Kakine", "art director", "A Certain Scientific Railgun season 2", "Konomi Kohara", "Tetsuya Yanagisawa", "cinematographer", "Kanae Itō", "Nozomi Nishida", "Misaka 10032", "Kengo Kawanishi", "Satomi Arai", "story arc", "Yoshino Nanjō", "Maiko Iuchi", "A Certain Scientific Railgun", "original video animation" ]
62,108,259
Category:North American people of African-American descent
[]
62,108,263
Miski
Miski may refer to: Miski, Chad Miski, Iran
[ "Miski, Iran", "Miski, Chad" ]
62,108,265
Tom Williams (defensive lineman)
William Thomas Williams (born July 21, 1948) is an American former professional football defensive end in the National Football League (NFL) who played for the San Diego Chargers. He played college football at University of California, Davis.
[ "defensive end", "Cordova High School (California)", "Defensive end", "National Football League", "Hempstead, New York", "UC Davis Aggies football", "college football", "University of California, Davis", "American football", "San Diego Chargers" ]
62,108,287
Category:Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Northern Cyprus
[]
62,108,303
File:Frank Ocean - DHL.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[ "Frank Ocean", "Blonded Radio" ]
62,108,336
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in the Netherlands
[]
62,108,342
Category:Savannah State Tigers basketball players
This category lists notable varsity men's basketball players at Savannah State University.
[ "Savannah State University" ]
62,108,370
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Moldova
[]
62,108,374
Category:Russian Buddhist monks
[]
62,108,381
Category:1870s murders in China
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62,108,383
Category:1890s murders in China
[]
62,108,396
File:Love Me Tender EP.jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[ "Love Me Tender (EP)", "Elvis Presley", "RCA Records" ]
62,108,399
Category:1890s murders in Asia
[]
62,108,401
Category:1890s crimes in Asia
[]
62,108,411
Category:1890s crimes in China
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62,108,416
Noah Gregor
Noah Gregor (born July 28, 1998) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the San Jose Sharks of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played for the Toronto Maple Leafs and Ottawa Senators. ==Early life== Gregor was born on July 28, 1998, in Beaumont, Alberta to parents Colin and Elise. He was born into a hockey-involved family as his father played four seasons in the Western Hockey League while his uncle was a radio host for The Sports Network until TSN 1260 was shut down in June 2023. Likewise, his brother Liam played hockey with the Beaumont Chiefs and Spruce Grove Saints. ==Playing career== ===Junior=== Growing up, Gregor played in the Beaumont Minor Hockey Association and Albert Midget Hockey League (AMHL). the same city that his father played in. Gregor returned to the Oil Kings for the 2013–14 season. On January 6, 2014, the Royals traded Gregor's rights to the Moose Jaw Warriors in exchange for Travis Brown. He began the 2014–15 season with the Warriors, recording six points through eight games before breaking his collarbone. He managed to return for two more games in late December, but reaggravated the injury and missed the remainder of the season. During the 2015–16 season, Gregor was selected to represent Team Cherry in the CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game. He finished the season with 28 goals and 73 points to earn the team's Most Sportsmanlike Player and Rookie of the Year Award. Gregor also accepted the Eastern Conference Rookie of the Year Award. Gregor returned to the Warriors for the 2016–17 season. Prior to the season beginning, he was named an alternate captain alongside Tanner Jeannot and Josh Thrower. On December 11, Gregor – alongside a 2018 eighth round pick – was traded back to the Royals in exchange for Ryan Peckford and a 2018 fourth round pick. He finished the season with 65 points in 60 games split between the two clubs. On July 25, 2018, the Royals traded Gregor to the Prince Albert Raiders. He recorded 88 points in 63 games for the club during the 2018–19 season. The Raiders were awarded the Ed Chynoweth Cup as league champions after defeating the Vancouver Giants in seven games. Gregor recorded 24 points in 23 postseason games. The Raiders, however, were unsuccessful in winning the Memorial Cup. ===Professional=== Gregor was selected in the fourth round, 111th overall, by the San Jose Sharks of the National Hockey League (NHL) in the 2016 NHL entry draft. On April 6, 2018, the Sharks signed Gregor to a three-year, entry-level contract. He subsequently joined the team's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the San Jose Barracuda, skating in one postseason game. On November 29, Gregor scored his first career NHL goal in a 4–1 win against the Los Angeles Kings. He split the 2019–20 season between the Sharks and Barracuda, skating in 28 games for the Sharks and 25 games for the Barracuda. He spent the entirety of the 2021–22 season with the Sharks, recording 23 points in 63 games. On August 22, 2022, Gregor signed a one-year, $950,000 contract extension with the Sharks. On April 1, 2023, Gregor recorded his first career hat-trick in a 7–2 win over the Arizona Coyotes. He finished the 2022–23 season with 17 points in 57 games. Gregor was not tendered a qualifying offer by the Sharks following the conclusion of the season, making him an unrestricted free agent. On September 6, 2023, Gregor agreed to a professional tryout offer with the Toronto Maple Leafs to attend their training camp. On October 10, the Maple Leafs signed Gregor to a one-year, $775,000 contract. In his first game for the team on October 11, Gregor scored the Maple Leafs' first goal of the season in an eventual 6–5 win over the Montreal Canadiens. On March 24, 2024, Gregor suffered a high stick to the face by Washington Capitals forward Tom Wilson. He suffered no injuries aside from multiple chipped teeth. Wilson was suspended six games for the action. He appeared in 63 games with the Maple Leafs, scoring six goals and 12 points. He made his Stanley Cup playoffs debut in game six of the Maple Leafs' first round series against the Boston Bruins. He also appeared in game seven as the Maple Leafs were eliminated by the Bruins. A restricted free agent at season's end, Toronto did not tender him a qualifying offer, making him an unrestricted free agent. He scored his first goal with the Senators shorthanded against Andrei Vasilevskiy in a 5–4 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on October 19. On March 7, 2025, Gregor was traded in a return to the San Jose Sharks alongside Zack Ostapchuk and a second-round pick in the 2025 NHL entry draft in exchange for Fabian Zetterlund, Tristen Robins and a fourth-round pick in 2025. ==International play== Gregor represented Team Canada's under-18 team at the 2016 IIHF World U18 Championships. He registered two assists in five games, but Canada finished fourth in the tournament. Gregor was invited to Team Canada for the 2022 IIHF World Championship, where the team won the silver medal. ==Career statistics== ===Regular season and playoffs=== ===International===
[ "Ice hockey contract", "2024 Stanley Cup playoffs", "2016 IIHF World U18 Championships", "Canada men's national ice hockey team", "2020–21 NHL season", "WHL bantam draft", "Assist (ice hockey)", "Ice hockey", "Victoria Royals", "Tom Wilson (ice hockey)", "Ed Chynoweth Cup", "Fox Sports", "2019 Memorial Cup", "Short-handed", "Centre (ice hockey)", "Los Angeles Times", "2020–21 AHL season", "2018 Calder Cup playoffs", "2017–18 WHL season", "Ottawa Senators", "2024–25 NHL season", "qualifying offer", "San Jose Barracuda", "2021–22 NHL season", "2022–23 NHL season", "National Hockey League", "The Sports Network", "San Jose Sharks", "2019–20 AHL season", "Goal (ice hockey)", "Washington Capitals", "Canada men's national under-18 ice hockey team", "Sportsnet", "Buffalo Sabres", "Point (ice hockey)", "2019–20 NHL season", "Free agent", "Spruce Grove Saints", "Ice Hockey World Championships", "2025 NHL entry draft", "2022 IIHF World Championship", "Hat-trick", "Vancouver Giants", "2018–19 WHL season", "2015–16 WHL season", "2016 NHL entry draft", "Boston Bruins", "Tanner Jeannot", "Arizona Coyotes", "Global News", "Los Angeles Kings", "American Hockey League", "Toronto Maple Leafs", "Zack Ostapchuk", "IIHF World U18 Championship", "Penalty (ice hockey)", "Beaumont, Alberta", "Montreal Canadiens", "Playoffs", "2017–18 AHL season", "2014–15 WHL season", "Andrei Vasilevskiy", "NBC Sports Bay Area", "2023–24 NHL season", "alternate captain", "ice hockey", "Regular season", "Prince Albert Raiders", "Tampa Bay Lightning", "2016–17 WHL season", "2021–22 AHL season", "Fabian Zetterlund", "Tristen Robins", "CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game", "2019-20 NHL season", "Moose Jaw Warriors", "Western Hockey League", "Season (sports)", "The Mercury News" ]
62,108,420
Category:1870s crimes in China
[]
62,108,469
Duke of Montrose (1804 ship)
{| {{Infobox ship career | Hide header= | Ship country=United Kingdom | Ship flag= | Ship name = Duke of Montrose | Ship namesake = Duke of Montrose | Ship owner = | Ship operator = | Ship ordered = | Ship builder = Falmouth Duke of Montrose had, of course, been sailing for some time before she appeared in LR. Ship arrival and departures (SAD) data in Lloyd's List and other newspapers carry mentions. There were also two notable engagements. The first occurred in May 1805. Mutineers had turned over to the French at Guadeloupe and the French commissioned her as the privateer Napoléon. Napoléon and , with a large number of privateers and some troops aboard then sailed to Dominica where they captured a British vessel. On 24 May, at Roseau, the President of Dominica wanted to send out a vessel to chase Napoléon and Impériale. Captain Dyneley of Duke of Montrose was at Roseau and was willing, but had a crew of only 22 men and boys. He also wanted the merchants at Dominica to agree to pay for Duke of Montrose if she was lost. The merchants refused, but Dyneley decide to go out anyway. The President then put on board 26 men from the 46th Regiment of Foot and 13 men from the light company of the 3rd West India Regiment, all under the command of Lieutenant Wallis of the 46th, and Duke of Montrose set out in chase. Two British warships, and were in the area. They arrived and joined the pursuit. Duke of Montrose succeeded in bringing Impérial to action and about 45 minutes of exchange of fire ensued. As Cygnet came up, Impériale struck. Wasp recaptured Napoléon. In his letter reporting the action, Admiral Alexander Cochrane, commander of the Leeward Islands Station, mentioned that "[T]he Captain of the Duke of Montrose Packet deserves great Credit for his Exertions". Duke of Montrose, White, master, sailed from Falmouth on 31 December 1806, bound for New York. She was at Bermuda between 28 and 31 January 1807. Next, she was at New York between 18 February and 13 March. Homeward bound, she left Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 25 March, and arrived back at Falmouth on 15 April. On 13 April 1807 Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth, having left New York on 13 March and Halifax on the 25th. Captain Deneley sailed from Falmouth on 18 May 1807, bound for New York. She was at Halifax between 10 and 13 June, and New York between 22 June and 6 August. She left Halifax on 18 August, and arrived back at Plymouth on 8 September. 1st capture: In November Duke of Montrose, Donelely, master, sailed for the West Indies. On 12 December she was 200 miles to windward of Barbados where she encountered the French privateer Confiance, of 5 guns and 85 men. An engagement of three hours ensued in which Captain Dynally, the mate, and four crew men were killed, and the master and one man were wounded, out of a crew of 28. After Duke of Montrose struck, her captors took her into Guadeloupe. Confiance had five men killed and many men wounded. captured the merchant vessel Grand Duc de Berg on 27 September 1808 and brought her into Plymouth on 4 October. Grand Duc de Berg was the former Duke of Montrose, and was coming from Guadeloupe with a valuable cargo. Head money was finally paid in April 1829 to the surviving members of Eclairs crew. Captain Aaron G. Blewitt was appointed captain of Duke of Montrose on 18 January 1809. On 9 March 1809 Duke of Montrose sailed from Falmouth for Jamaica. She arrived at Barbados on 5 April and Jamaica on 16 April. On 6 September 1809 Duke of Montrose arrived back at Falmouth from Cadiz. Captain Blewett sailed from Falmouth on 14 March 1810. Duke of Montrose stopped at Bermuda on 20 to 23 April on her way to New York. She was at New York from 28 April 8 May. Homeward bound, she was at Halifax from 21 to 24 May, and arrived back at Falmouth on 20 June. On 4 December 1813 Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth from Lisbon and Scilly. 3rd capture: Acting Captain John Forester (or Foster) sailed from Falmouth on 28 July 1813, bound for Brazil. Duke of Montrose was at Madeira between 7 and 11 August. She left Rio de Janeiro on 17 October and Bahia on 12 November. Before they left, the French put on Duke of Montrose the prisoners they had taken from several captures. The French had captured the Falmouth packet on 25 November. John Vivian, her captain, was senior to Forester in the Packet Service so he took command of Duke of Montrose. He brought with him most of his crew and two passengers. The French also put on board the crews of the transport Diana and the brig Lucia. Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth on 21 December. On 25 November two French frigates, one of them , captured Little Catherine as she was sailing from Passages. The French took off Little Catherines crew and abandoned her. On 28 November picked her up at sea. Hotspur found her plundered, all but two of her guns thrown overboard, with her sails set, but her rudder free so that she drifted at the mercy of wind and waves. Captain the Honourable Jocelny Percy of Hotspur put a crew on board who took her into Penzance. A gale on the 30th upset her and put her on her beam ends, where she lay waterlogged. On 4 June 1814, Duke of Montrose arrived at Jamaica from Falmouth. She returned to Falmouth on 6 August. On 15–16 July she had encountered a hurricane that she and her escort simply had to ride out. Captain Blewett sailed from Falmouth on 11 September 1814, bound for Halifax. She was at Halifax between 21 October and 3 November. She returned to Falmouth on 19 November. She had put her mail on a boat not long before she was lost.
[ "Lloyd's List", "Falmouth, Cornwall", "Leeward Islands Station", "Pasaia", "single-ship action", "Builder's Old Measurement", "Duke of Montrose", "Alexander Cochrane", "Halifax, Nova Scotia", "Post Office Packet Service", "£sd", "Barbados", "shilling", "Lloyd's Register", "46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot", "West India Regiment", "pence", "War of 1812" ]
62,108,470
File:Loving You soundtrack.jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[ "RCA Records", "Loving You (soundtrack)" ]
62,108,471
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Tanzania
[]
62,108,481
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Lebanon
[]
62,108,483
Jake Bischoff
Jacob Michael Bischoff (born July 25, 1994) is an American professional ice hockey defenseman and captain of the Henderson Silver Knights in the American Hockey League (AHL). He was drafted by the New York Islanders in the 2012 NHL entry draft. ==Early life== Bischoff was born on June 25, 1994, in Cambridge, Minnesota, as the oldest child to parents Jackie Tok and Grant Bischoff. His father played ice hockey for the University of Minnesota and was drafted by the Minnesota North Stars after his freshman year. As a result, Bischoff was trained by his father from a young age. He immediately joined the Islanders' AHL affiliate, the Bridgeport Sound Tigers for the remainder of the regular season, posting 3 points in 6 games. On June 21, 2017, Bischoff was traded by the Islanders, along with Mikhail Grabovski and a pair of draft selections to the Vegas Golden Knights, in exchange for 2017 NHL expansion draft considerations. In joining the Golden Knights in their inaugural season, Bischoff was assigned to AHL affiliate, the Chicago Wolves for his first full professional season in 2017–18. On July 16, 2019, as a restricted free agent, Bischoff was signed to a three-year contract extension with the Golden Knights. After missing the entirety of the 2021–22 season due to a lower body injury, Bischoff opted to remain within the Golden Knights organization, by signing a one-year AHL contract with affiliate, the Henderson Silver Knights, on July 14, 2022. Bischoff was later named captain of the Silver Knights on October 12, 2023, succeeding Brayden Pachal. ==Career statistics== ==Awards and honors==
[ "Point (ice hockey)", "Mikhail Grabovski", "2017 NHL expansion draft", "2019–20 NHL season", "Defenseman (ice hockey)", "Vegas Golden Knights", "Zach Werenski", "Anaheim Ducks", "Playoffs", "2017–18 AHL season", "Minnesota North Stars", "2013-14 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "2016–17 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Sportsnet.ca", "2012–13 USHL season", "Big Ten Conference", "NCAA Division I men's ice hockey", "National Hockey League", "Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey", "Assist (ice hockey)", "New York Islanders", "2016–17 AHL season", "Cambridge, Minnesota", "2015–16 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "ice hockey", "2018–19 AHL season", "2021–22 NHL seasin", "Regular season", "Henderson Silver Knights", "2019–20 AHL season", "2012 NHL entry draft", "Goal (ice hockey)", "Bridgeport Sound Tigers", "Brayden Pachal", "Captain (ice hockey)", "Minnesota State High School League", "United States Hockey League", "University of Minnesota", "Grand Rapids High School", "Blake McLaughlin", "2016-17 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Trevor Hamilton (ice hockey)", "2020–21 AHL season", "2017-18 AHL season", "American Hockey League", "2015-16 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "2014–15 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Big Ten Men's Ice Hockey Defensive Player of the Year", "Chicago Wolves", "Season (sports)", "2011-12 USHL season", "Omaha Lancers", "Defenceman (ice hockey)", "2022–23 AHL season", "2023–24 AHL season", "Penalty (ice hockey)" ]
62,108,516
Parulia, Diamond Harbour
{{Infobox settlement | name = Parulia | native_name = | native_name_lang = | other_name = | nickname = | settlement_type = Village | image_skyline = | image_alt = | imagesize = 300px | image_caption = | pushpin_map = India West Bengal#India | pushpin_label_position = | pushpin_map_alt = | pushpin_mapsize = 300 | pushpin_map_caption = Location in West Bengal##Location in India | coordinates = | subdivision_type = Country | subdivision_name = | subdivision_type1 = State | subdivision_name1 = West Bengal | subdivision_type2 = District | subdivision_name2 = South 24 Parganas | subdivision_type3 = CD Block | subdivision_name3 = Diamond Harbour I | established_title = | established_date = | founder = | named_for = | government_type = | governing_body = | unit_pref = Metric | area_footnotes = | area_rank = | area_total_km2 = 0.67 | elevation_footnotes = | elevation_m = 8 | population_total = 1825 | population_as_of = 2011 | population_rank = | population_density_km2 = auto | population_demonym = | population_footnotes = | demographics_type1 = Languages | demographics1_title1 = Official | demographics1_info1 = Bengali | demographics1_title2 = Additional official | demographics1_info2 = English Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the subdivision. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map. ===Location=== Parulia is located at . ==Demographics== According to the 2011 Census of India, Parulia had a total population of 1,825, of which 947 (52%) were males and 878 (48%) were females. There were 146 persons in the age range of 0–6 years. The total number of literate persons in Parulia was 1,367 (81.42% of the population over 6 years). ==Civic administration== ===Police station=== Parulia coastal police station was established in 2014. It has jurisdiction over the Parulia gram panchayat in the Diamond Harbour I CD block and the Kamarpole gram panchayat in the Diamond Harbour II CD block. ==Transport== A local road links Parulia to the National Highway 12. ==Healthcare== Panchagram (Netra) Rural Hospital at PO Panchagram Singhi, with 30 beds, is the major government medical facility in the Diamond Harbour I CD block.
[ "Archaeological", "Durganagar, Diamond Harbour", "Harindanga, Falta", "Sangrampur, Diamond Harbour", "Patdaha", "South 24 Parganas", "Mohanpur, Diamond Harbour", "Kulpi", "Berandari Bagaria", "Diamond Harbour subdivision", "Ministry of Minority Affairs", "Diamond Harbour", "Netra, Diamond Harbour", "Harinarayanpur, Kulpi", "gram panchayat", "States and territories of India", "Bhushna", "Punya, Falta", "Bengali language", "West Bengal", "National Highway 12 (India)", "Raichak", "List of Regional Transport Office districts in India", "Baneshwarpur", "Fatepur, Falta", "Community development block in India", "census town", "Diamond Harbour I", "Sarisha", "2011 Census of India", "Diamond Harbour (Vidhan Sabha constituency)", "India", "Indian Standard Time", "Dhola, Diamond Harbour", "Deulpota", "Falta, South 24 Parganas", "English language", "Diamond Harbour (Lok Sabha constituency)", "Hasimnagar", "Ganges Delta", "Hooghly River", "Ramnagar, Diamond Harbour", "Masat, Diamond Harbour", "Chandpala Anantapathpur" ]
62,108,526
Category:Indigenous languages of Europe
[]
62,108,557
Yakov Trenin
Yakov Vyacheslavovich Trenin (; born 13 January 1997) is a Russian professional ice hockey forward for the Minnesota Wild of the National Hockey League (NHL). ==Playing career== Trenin was drafted 55th overall by the Nashville Predators in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft and attended their development camp that summer. After the draft, Predators' North American amateur scout Jean-Philippe Glaude said: "He's a big center, who plays a solid two-way game...I see him as a complete, top-two center that can put points on the board and the coaches will love to have because he can play in any situation." In July 2015, Trenin signed a three-year, entry-level contract with the Predators. After signing the contract, Trenin was re-assigned to the Gatineau Olympiques of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) out of training camp. Trenin recorded his first career NHL goal on 7 December 2019, in a 6–4 win over the New Jersey Devils, becoming the 184th player in franchise history to score a goal. On 7 March 2024, Trenin was traded from Nashville to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Jeremy Hanzel and a third-round pick in the 2024 NHL Entry Draft. Trenin played out the remainder of the regular season by centering the Avalanche's fourth-line and contributing with 3 points through 16 games. He helped the Avalanche reach the second-round of the playoffs, adding 1 goal through 10 appearances, before suffering elimination by the Dallas Stars. As a free agent at the conclusion of his contract with the Avalanche, Trenin was signed to a four-year, $14 million contract in joining his third central division club, the Minnesota Wild, on 1 July 2024. ==Career statistics== ===Regular season and playoffs=== ===International===
[ "Point (ice hockey)", "2019–20 NHL season", "New Jersey Devils", "2024 NHL Entry Draft", "Playoffs", "2017–18 AHL season", "2015–16 QMJHL season", "2021–22 NHL season", "2023–24 NHL season", "Kontinental Hockey League", "Russia men's national junior ice hockey team", "2020–21 NHL season", "2014–15 QMJHL season", "2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships", "2022–23 NHL season", "National Hockey League", "Forward (ice hockey)", "SKA Saint Petersburg", "Assist (ice hockey)", "Junior Hockey League (Russia)", "Ice hockey", "IIHF World U20 Championship", "2016–17 AHL season", "2016–17 QMJHL season", "ice hockey", "2018–19 AHL season", "2020–21 KHL season", "Regular season", "Colorado Avalanche", "Quebec Major Junior Hockey League", "2019–20 AHL season", "2015–16 AHL season", "Dallas Stars", "Milwaukee Admirals", "Goal (ice hockey)", "Chelyabinsk", "Minnesota Wild", "Chelyabinsk Polar Bears", "2015 NHL Entry Draft", "Centre (ice hockey)", "American Hockey League", "Penalty (ice hockey)", "Season (sports)", "Gatineau Olympiques", "entry-level contract", "Nashville Predators" ]
62,108,568
Duke of Montrose (ship)
Several vessels have been named Duke of Montrose for one or another Duke of Montrose: was launched as an East Indiaman. She made eight voyages for the British East India Company (EIC). She then briefly became a troop transport, sailing to the West Indies. She was sold in 1811 for breaking up. was a Falmouth packet launched in 1804. She participated in six single-ship actions. During the Napoleonic Wars she captured a French naval schooner but a year or so later a French privateer captured her. She returned to British hands some nine months later. During the War of 1812 she was able to drive off American privateers twice. An American frigate captured her in 1813 but gave her up to her crew, also putting onboard the crews of other vessels the frigate had captured. Then a French frigate captured her and gave her up after disarming her. She was wrecked at Barbados in 1815.
[ "Falmouth, Cornwall", "single-ship action", "East Indiaman", "Duke of Montrose", "East India Company", "Post Office Packet Service" ]
62,108,574
2019–20 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team
The 2019–20 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team represented Oakland University in the 2019–20 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Grizzlies, led by 36th-year head coach Greg Kampe, played their home games at the Athletics Center O'rena in Auburn Hills, Michigan as members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 14–19, 8–10 in Horizon League play to finish in sixth place. They defeated Cleveland State in the first round of the Horizon League tournament before losing in the quarterfinals to Green Bay. ==Previous season== The Golden Grizzlies finished the 2018–19 season 16–17 overall, 11–7 in Horizon League play, where they finished in third place. In the Horizon League tournament, they defeated Youngstown State in the quarterfinals, before falling to Northern Kentucky in the semifinals. ==Roster== ==Schedule and results== |- !colspan=12 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=12 style=| Non-conference regular season |- !colspan=9 style=| Horizon League regular season |- !colspan=12 style=| Horizon League tournament |- |- Source
[ "ESPN+", "2019–20 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team", "Greg Kampe", "Goshen College", "Auburn Hills, Michigan", "2019–20 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team", "Athletics Center O'rena", "Novi, Michigan", "Xfinity Center (College Park, Maryland)", "2019–20 UIC Flames men's basketball team", "2019–20 Fairfield Stags men's basketball team", "Horizon League", "Little Caesars Arena", "Convocation Center (Northern Illinois University)", "Lambertville, Michigan", "Wolstein Center", "2019 Horizon League men's basketball tournament", "2019–20 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team", "Cleveland, OH", "2019–20 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens men's basketball team", "Bladensburg, Maryland", "Kissimmee, FL", "Milwaukee, WI", "Auburn Hills, MI", "Highland Heights, KY", "2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Detroit, Michigan", "Greensboro, North Carolina", "Indiana Farmers Coliseum", "Oakland University", "Chicago, IL", "FloSports", "2019–20 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team", "2020 Horizon League men's basketball tournament", "2019–20 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Canada", "Fairborn, OH", "2018–19 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team", "Silver Spurs Arena", "2019–20 UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball team", "University Arena (Western Michigan University)", "ESPNU College Basketball", "Credit Union 1 Arena", "Ashwaubenon, WI", "Big Ten Network", "2019–20 Hartford Hawks men's basketball team", "2019–20 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team", "Haslett, Michigan", "Tony Jones (basketball)", "2018–19 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team", "Chicago, Illinois", "Burlington, Ontario", "2019–20 Bowling Green Falcons men's basketball team", "Syracuse, NY", "AP Poll", "Detroit, MI", "2018–19 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team", "Calihan Hall", "ESPN3", "Rochester College", "Nutter Center", "Charlotte, North Carolina", "ESPN2", "Indianapolis, IN", "Stroh Center", "BB&T Arena", "Resch Center", "2019–20 Northern Illinois Huskies men's basketball team", "Savage Arena", "Nigeria", "College Park, MD", "Kalamazoo, MI", "UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena", "Lagos", "Carrier Dome", "2019–20 Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball team", "2019–20 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team", "Coloma, Michigan", "Beeghly Center", "DeKalb, IL", "Bowling Green, OH", "2019–20 Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball team", "2019–20 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team", "2019–20 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team", "Saginaw Valley State University", "2019–20 Toledo Rockets men's basketball team", "Cedar Springs, Michigan", "Farmington Hills, Michigan", "2019–20 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team", "Boca Raton, Florida", "2019–20 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team", "Eastern Time Zone", "Youngstown, OH", "2019–20 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team", "Knoxville, Tennessee", "Toledo, OH" ]
62,108,577
Parulia (disambiguation)
Parulia refers to a village in East Singhbum district in Jharkhand, India Parulia may also refer to: Parulia, Bardhaman, a village in Purba Badhaman district, West Bengal, India Parulia, Diamond Harbour, a village in South 24 Parganas district, West Bengal, India
[ "Purulia (Lok Sabha constituency)", "Purulia (Vidhan Sabha constituency)", "Purulia", "Purulia district", "Parulia", "Parulia, Bardhaman", "Parulia, Diamond Harbour" ]
62,108,581
15th Signal Regiment (United Kingdom)
The 15th Signal Regiment (15 Sig Regt) is military communications unit of the British Army's Royal Corps of Signals. == History == The regiment was originally formed before World War II during the expansion of British Army signals units. The unit provided communications for the island of Cyprus but was disbanded shortly after 1963. In 1992, following the Options for Change reforms, it was reformed to support HQ Northern Ireland and other units deployed during Operation Banner. === World War Period === ==== Inter-war ==== Before World War II, the Egypt Signals unit was formed. It was tasked with providing communications and signals support for British Army units based in Egypt. Their area of responsibility was not limited to Egypt itself, but included the following areas: Mandatory Palestine, Sudan, and Cyprus. During this time, the unit was collectively known as Egypt Command Signals. ==== World War II ==== In 1940, the regiment was based in Cairo. Following Italy's entry in the war, the regiment's support ranged from providing signals and communications for units in Cyprus, Greece, Macedonia, the Balkans, and Eastern Africa. After the Options for Change reforms, the Regiment gained command of more signal squadrons. After the end of Operation Banner in Northern Ireland, the Regiment was disbanded. On 30 September 2011, the Unified Systems Support Organisation (USSO), based in Blandford Forum in Dorset, By 2019 the Regimental HQ will move from its current location at Blandford Camp to Swinton Barracks in Perham Down, thereby co-locating with the remainder of the regular units of 7th Signal Group. The remainder of the old Squadrons will reform as 13 Sig Regt, and remain based under a new Regimental HQ at Blandford Camp. The Regiment under this reform is to re-organise and become a close support signals unit. The Regiment will support the 12th Armoured Infantry Brigade by 2020. == Current structure == The regiment's current structure in April 2025 is as follows: 15th Signal Regiment, at Swinton Barracks, Perham Down 243 (Gurkha) Signal Squadron Support Squadron
[ "Eastern Africa", "11th Signal Brigade and Headquarters West Midlands", "Military Communications", "Swinton Barracks", "Blandford Camp", "Northern Ireland", "Thiepval Barracks", "Lisburn", "Middle East Command", "Cairo", "12th Armoured Infantry Brigade", "British Forces Aden", "Sudan", "Dorset", "Options for Change", "Macedonia (region)", "Blandford Forum", "7th Signal Group", "Operation Banner", "Perham Down", "the Balkans", "Cyprus", "Mandatory Palestine", "Regiment", "Royal Corps of Signals", "World War II", "Egypt", "Greece", "British Army" ]
62,108,582
Category:21st-century crimes in China
[]
62,108,592
2019–20 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team
The 2019–20 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team represented South Dakota State University in the 2019–20 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Jackrabbits, led by twentieth-year head coach Aaron Johnston, competed in the Summit League. They played home games in Frost Arena in Brookings, South Dakota. ==Previous season== The 2018–19 Jackrabbits went 28–7 overall and 15–1 in conference play, finishing first. The Jackrabbits won the 2019 Summit League tournament defeating Purdue Fort Wayne in the quarterfinals, Oral Roberts in the semifinals, and South Dakota in the Summit League championship game, 83–71, earning the Jackrabbits an automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. They received a six seed in the Portland Region facing the number 11 seed Quinnipiac and defeated them 76–65. In the second round, the Jackrabbits would face the number three seed Syracuse and beat them as well with a score of 75–64. For the second time this season, the Jackrabbits would lose to Oregon but in the Sweet Sixteen matchup. ==Roster== ==Schedule== |- !colspan=9 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=9 style=| Non-conference regular season |- !colspan=9 style=| Summit League regular season |- !colspan=9 style=| Summit League women's tournament Source: ==Rankings==
[ "White Bear Lake Area High School", "Central High School (Aberdeen, South Dakota)", "2018–19 Quinnipiac Bobcats women's basketball team", "2019-20 Montana State Bobcats women's basketball team", "2019-20 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team", "Midco", "Matthew Knight Arena", "Mount Vernon/Plankinton High School", "Sioux Falls, SD", "Johnston High School", "Fremont, NE", "Kingsley-Pierson High School", "2019 Summit League women's basketball tournament", "Mendota Heights, MN", "2019-20 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles women's basketball team", "Millard West High School", "2019-20 Denver Pioneers women's basketball team", "Cancún Challenge", "2019-20 South Florida Bulls women's basketball team", "Central Time Zone", "Omaha, NE", "Dakota Wesleyan Tigers", "2019-20 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball team", "Wahpeton, North Dakota", "Macomb, IL", "2019-20 Florida Gulf Coast Eagles women's basketball team", "Roosevelt High School (South Dakota)", "Kingsley, IA", "2019-20 Central Michigan Chippewas women's basketball team", "2019-20 Western Illinois Leathernecks women's basketball team", "Aberdeen, SD", "Loyola Catholic School", "Aaron Johnston (basketball)", "Scheels Center", "2018–19 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons women's basketball team", "Lino Lakes, MN", "2018–19 Oregon Ducks women's basketball team", "Summit League", "Woonsocket High School (South Dakota)", "2019-20 North Dakota State Bison women's basketball team", "Grand Forks, ND", "Wayzata High School", "Kress Events Center", "2019-20 Coppin State Eagles women's basketball team", "Nebraska Cornhuskers women's basketball", "Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball", "2018–19 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles women's basketball team", "Wahpeton, ND", "Denny Sanford Premier Center", "South Dakota State University", "2018–19 South Dakota State Jackrabbits women's basketball team", "Henry Sibley High School", "2019-20 Omaha Mavericks women's basketball team", "ESPNU", "2019-20 Oregon Ducks women's basketball team", "Plankinton, SD", "2019-20 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team", "Allen County War Memorial Coliseum", "Des Moines, IA", "2019-20 Creighton Bluejays women's basketball team", "2018–19 South Dakota Coyotes women's basketball team", "Frost Arena", "Blaine, MN", "Baxter Arena", "2019-20 North Dakota Fighting Hawks women's basketball team", "2019-20 Chattanooga Mocs women's basketball team", "2019-20 Green Bay Phoenix women's basketball team", "Western Hall", "Sanford Coyote Sports Center", "2019-20 Wyoming Cowgirls basketball team", "2019–20 NCAA Division I women's basketball season", "AP poll", "2019-20 Marquette Golden Eagles women's basketball team", "2019 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament", "Denver, CO", "Fort Wayne, IN", "Johnston, IA", "Mankato, MN", "Brookings, South Dakota", "Cancún, Mexico", "2018–19 Syracuse Orange women's basketball team", "Mabee Center", "Eugene, OR", "Vermillion, SD", "Brookings, SD", "D. J. Sokol Arena", "Fargo, ND", "Betty Engelstad Sioux Center", "Plymouth, MN", "Letcher, SD", "2019-20 Drake Bulldogs women's basketball team", "Green Bay, WI", "2020 Summit League women's basketball tournament", "Knapp Center", "Centennial High School (Minnesota)", "2019–20 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings", "St. Cloud State Huskies", "Fremont Senior High School (Nebraska)", "Tulsa, OK" ]
62,108,596
Category:20th-century crimes in China
[]
62,108,600
Category:19th-century crimes in China
[]
62,108,615
Berthold Litzmann
Berthold Litzmann (18 April 1857 – 14 October 1926) was a professor of German studies and a literature historian. He was a professor at the University of Bonn and the founder of the Society for Literature History, which also included Thomas Mann. He is known as the author of a three part biography of Clara Schumann. Litzmann was born in Kiel, the son of Carl Conrad Theodor Litzmann. Ludwig Schröder. Ein Beitrag zur deutschen Litteratur- und Theatergeschichte. 2 Parts. Voß, Hamburg/Leipzig 1890–1894. Goethes Faust. Eine Einführung. Fleischel, Berlin 1904. Das Tragische in Gerhart Hauptmanns Dramen (= Mitteilungen der Literarhistorischen Gesellschaft Bonn. Jg. 3 Nr. 6, 1908). Ruhfus, Dortmund 1908.
[ "Thomas Mann", "Kiel", "History of literature", "Clara Schumann", "University of Bonn", "German studies", "Munich", "Carl Conrad Theodor Litzmann" ]
62,108,619
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Iceland
[]
62,108,622
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Honduras
[]
62,108,623
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Costa Rica
[]
62,108,625
Category:19th-century murders in China
[]
62,108,629
Category:20th-century murders in China
[]
62,108,630
Category:21st-century murders in China
[]
62,108,632
Category:Indigenous languages of Asia
[]
62,108,656
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Scotland
[]
62,108,657
Category:Haitian expatriate sportspeople in Hungary
[]
62,108,660
Category:Indigenous languages of Siberia
[]
62,108,661
File:Destination Anywhere film poster.jpg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,108,674
Category:Indigenous culture of Siberia
[]
62,108,680
Template:Boston Public Garden
[ "Triton Babies Fountain", "Statue of William Ellery Channing", "Statue of Tadeusz Kościuszko (Boston)", "Boston Public Garden Foot Bridge", "Statue of Edward Everett Hale", "Boy and Bird Fountain", "Small Child Fountain", "Japanese Lantern (Boston)", "Statue of Wendell Phillips", "Boston Public Garden 9/11 Memorial", "Friends of the Public Garden", "Bagheera Fountain", "Ether Monument", "Statue of Edward Everett", "Marvin E. Goody Memorial", "Statue of Thomas Cass", "commons:Category:Boston Public Garden", "Equestrian statue of George Washington (Boston)", "Make Way for Ducklings (sculpture)", "Statue of Charles Sumner (Boston)", "George Robert White Memorial", "Boston Public Garden", "Boston Public Garden Flagpole Base" ]
62,108,692
Category:Boston Public Garden
[]
62,108,700
File:North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences logo.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[ "Raleigh, North Carolina", "North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources" ]
62,108,708
File:Queen of New Orleans.jpg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,108,712
Jim Browner
Jimmie Lee Browner (December 4, 1955 – March 6, 2024) was an American professional football player who was a defensive back for the Cincinnati Bengals of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. His brothers, Ross, Joey, and Keith, were also NFL players. Browner died on March 6, 2024, at the age of 68.
[ "1977 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team", "College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS", "Fumble", "Warren G. Harding High School", "Atlanta, Georgia", "National Football League", "Ross Browner", "Interception", "Notre Dame Fighting Irish football", "Keith Browner", "college football", "Joey Browner", "Cincinnati Bengals", "American football", "Tribune Chronicle", "Defensive back", "Warren, Ohio", "defensive back" ]
62,108,713
File:Sir-Edward-Dillon-Lott-du-Cann.jpg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,108,733
Sedrick Barefield
Sedrick Lee Barefield (born November 18, 1996) is a Filipino-American professional basketball player for the Blackwater Bossing of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA). He played college basketball for the SMU Mustangs and the Utah Utes. == High school career == In 2013, Barefield averaged 17.4 points, 4.4 assists, 2.2 rebounds and 2.3 steals in 33 matches while piloting his school to the championship game of the 2014 California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) State Division 1 Basketball tournament. Some of his individual accolades include being named as co-MVP with fellow Fil-Am Ethan Alvano in the Big VIII tournament that season, as well as being selected to the CIF All-State Team. He also got to play in the international showcase Adidas Nations. In 2014, Barefield helped his team win the Tip-Off Tournament. He averaged 20.6 points, 4.2 assists, 2.2 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game that season, led the Huskies to a 25–6 record, the CIF-State Div.1 regional final and a No.4 final state ranking by MaxPreps. He was selected Big VIII League MVP and All-CIF, to go along with his multiple all-tournament awards and honors. On February 17, 2014, Barefield committed to SMU. He made formal his desire to suit up for the Larry Brown-mentored squad by signing his Letter of Intent on November 12 of that year. At SMU, he only played in five games. Coach Brown assisted his transfer to Utah with a call to Larry Krystkowiak, Utah's head coach. Barefield missed several of the first games of Utah's 2016–17 season due to transfer rules. In his debut, he scored 18 points. He then scored 35 points several days later in a loss to the San Francisco Dons. In March, he helped Utah beat the California Golden Bears with his 14 points. That season, Utah lost to California in the first round of the Pac-12 tournament when he missed a three that could have sent the game to overtime. They also lost in the first round to the Boise State Broncos in the NIT. In his junior season debut, Barefield scored 22 points in a win over the Prairie View A&M Panthers. He then contracted a stomach virus, causing him to miss the following game, yet Utah won by 40 over the Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils without him. Later that season, he had 23 points in a loss to the Arizona Wildcats. In a matchup against fellow Fil-Am point guard Remy Martin of the Arizona State Sun Devils, he had 21 points, but Martin's team took the victory. He then had a shooting slump and had to come off the bench after starting for majority of the season. He then had 14 points and three assists off the bench in a win over the Washington State Cougars. In a rematch with Arizona State, he scored 17 points and hit the game-tying 3-pointer with 1.8 seconds left in regulation, helping Utah knock off the Sun Devils in overtime. The following game, a rematch with Arizona, he led Utah with 26 points, but they lost. That season, Utah made it all the way to the championship round of the NIT, in which he scored 22 points with six threes, but they lost to the Penn State Nittany Lions. Barefield declared for the 2018 NBA draft, and had worked out for the Utah Jazz and Los Angeles Lakers. However, he backed out and returned for one more season with Utah. He started that season with 18 points and nine assists in a win over the Maine Black Bears. He started the Utes’ first nine games and then, after going 1 for 7 against the Kentucky Wildcats, began coming off the bench. Three games later, he dropped 33 points on the Nevada Wolf Pack off the bench and moved back in the lineup. Against Arizona State, he had a game-high 24 points. Against Arizona, he had 26 points, but fouled out, allowing Arizona to win in overtime. He matched his season high in points in a win over Washington State. He earned All-Pac-12 honors that season while also totaling 1,000 points in his college career. His college career ended with a loss to the Oregon Ducks in the first round of the Pac-12 tournament. As a senior at Utah, he averaged 16.8 points, 3.8 assists and 2.1 rebounds per game. ==Professional career== After going undrafted in the 2019 NBA draft, Barefield signed with the Oklahoma City Thunder of the National Basketball Association (NBA) for NBA Summer League. He subsequently joined the Oklahoma City Blue of the NBA G League. Barefield posted 29 points, one rebound, one assist and one steal in a 149–117 win over the Stockton Kings on January 17, 2020. He averaged 9.0 points, 1.4 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game, shooting 39 percent from behind the arc. On July 16, 2020, Barefield signed with Nevėžis Kėdainiai of the Lithuanian Basketball League. He scored 22 points in a close loss to BC Šiauliai. Against Rytas Vilnius, he put up 29 points, but they still lost their sixth consecutive game. Several months later, he recorded 28 points in the final game of the regular season, but his team still fell to dead last in the league. Barefiel joined Apollon Patras in Greece after his stint in Lithuania. In three games, he registered 3.0 points in 12.6 minutes of play. On February 27, 2022, Barefield was reacquired by the Oklahoma City Blue. In May 2022, Barefield declared for the PBA Season 47 draft. On September 8, 2022, Barefield signed with the Taipei Fubon Braves of the P. League+. However, he never played for the team. On October 11, 2022, Barefield signed with the Tainan TSG GhostHawks of the T1 League. He only played one game for them before being released by the team. On February 7, 2023, it was reported that Barefield signed with the Bay Area Dragons of the East Asia Super League as their Asian import. The contract only lasted for the EASL Champions Week. He helped Bay Area claim third place in that tournament. In April 2023, Barefield joined Guinean club SLAC of the Basketball Africa League (BAL), qualifying as an import player in the 2023 season. == Career statistics == === International === === College === ===BAL=== |- | style="text-align:left;"|2023 | style="text-align:left;"|SLAC | 1 || 1 || 22.5 || .333 || .400 || .000 || 2.0 || 3.0 || 2.0 || .0 || 8.0 |- ==Personal life== Barefield is of Filipino descent through his mother. He became a Filipino citizen prior to joining the PBA Season 47 draft. His father, Ray Barefield, is a former point guard for San Diego State and current head coach of Rancho Christian's boys' basketball program. He has a sister, Tia, who is currently playing basketball for the girls' program of Rancho Christian.
[ "Corona, California", "California Golden Bears men's basketball", "basketball", "college basketball", "Apollon Patras B.C.", "2018 National Invitation Tournament", "East Asia Super League", "2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "2019 NBA draft", "San Diego State Aztecs men's basketball", "2017 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament", "SMU Mustangs men's basketball", "Maine Black Bears men's basketball", "SLAC (basketball club)", "Oklahoma City Blue", "P. League+", "Utah Jazz", "BC Nevėžis", "Stockton Kings", "BC Rytas", "Tainan TSG GhostHawks", "Basketball Africa League", "Boise State Broncos men's basketball", "2023 BAL season", "Remy Martin (basketball)", "2015–16 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Philippine Basketball Association", "Arizona State Sun Devils men's basketball", "Utah Utes men's basketball", "Oregon Ducks men's basketball", "Centennial High School (Corona, California)", "Arizona Wildcats men's basketball", "Greek Basket League", "Blackwater Bossing", "2016–17 Utah Utes men's basketball team", "Larry Brown (basketball)", "Point guard", "Taipei Fubon Braves", "PBA Season 47 draft", "Ethan Alvano", "2020–21 LKL season", "Penn State Nittany Lions basketball", "2017–18 Utah Utes men's basketball team", "Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils basketball", "shooting guard", "Bay Area Dragons", "Prairie View A&M Panthers basketball", "2017 National Invitation Tournament", "Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball", "2019 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament", "Larry Krystkowiak", "Los Angeles Lakers", "CBS Sports", "Oklahoma City Thunder", "San Francisco Dons men's basketball", "NBA Summer League", "NBA G League", "Lietuvos krepšinio lyga", "T1 League", "2015–16 SMU Mustangs men's basketball team", "UCLA Bruins men's basketball", "2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball", "BC Šiauliai", "National Basketball Association", "2018–19 Utah Utes men's basketball team", "MaxPreps", "Washington State Cougars men's basketball", "List of All-Pac-12 Conference men's basketball teams", "2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season" ]
62,108,735
Louisiana's 32nd State Senate district
Louisiana's 32nd State Senate district is one of 39 districts in the Louisiana State Senate. It has been represented by Republican Glen Womack since 2020, succeeding term-limited fellow Republican Neil Riser. ==Geography== District 32 covers a massive swath of Central Louisiana and Acadiana, including all of Caldwell, Catahoula, Franklin, and LaSalle Parishes, as well as parts of Avoyelles, Concordia, Ouachita, Rapides, Richland, and West Feliciana Parishes. Towns entirely or partially within the district include Jonesville, Winnsboro, Jena, Ferriday, Vidalia, and St. Francisville. At over 4,000 square miles, it is the largest Senate district in Louisiana.}} ===2015=== {{Election box begin no change| title= 2015 Louisiana State Senate election, District 32 |- | 2020 | President | align="right" | Trump 80.5–18.5% |- | 2019 | Governor (runoff) | align="right" | Rispone 70.2–29.8% |- | 2016 | President | align="right" | Trump 79.2–19.0% |- | 2015 | Governor (runoff) | align="right" | Vitter 58.9–41.1% |- | 2014 | Senate (runoff) | align="right" | Cassidy 75.5–24.5% |- | 2012 | President | align="right" | Romney 76.1–22.6% |- |}
[ "2011 Louisiana elections", "St. Francisville, Louisiana", "2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election", "Central Louisiana", "Winnsboro, Louisiana", "Concordia Parish, Louisiana", "David Vitter", "Acadiana", "LaSalle Parish, Louisiana", "Ouachita Parish, Louisiana", "2012 United States presidential election in Louisiana", "Catahoula Parish, Louisiana", "2019 Louisiana elections", "2016 United States presidential election in Louisiana", "Franklin Parish, Louisiana", "Louisiana's 5th congressional district", "Glen Womack", "Vidalia, Louisiana", "Richland Parish, Louisiana", "Louisiana State Senate", "Louisiana House of Representatives", "2014 United States Senate election in Louisiana", "Two-round system", "Bill Cassidy", "West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana", "Eddie Rispone", "Republican Party (United States)", "Ferriday, Louisiana", "2019 Louisiana gubernatorial election", "Neil Riser", "Caldwell Parish, Louisiana", "Mitt Romney", "Jonesville, Louisiana", "Louisiana", "2020 United States presidential election in Louisiana", "Rapides Parish, Louisiana", "Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana", "Jena, Louisiana", "2015 Louisiana elections", "jungle primary", "Donald Trump" ]
62,108,737
Category:Covered bridges in Union County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Union County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Union County, Pennsylvania" ]
62,108,747
Dusty (Fred Eaglesmith album)
Dusty is the 12th studio album by Canadian alternative country singer-songwriter Fred Eaglesmith. It was produced by Scott Merritt, and released by A Major Label on November 23, 2004. ==Background== 2004's Dusty marks Eaglesmith's reunion with producer Scott Merritt, who had helped shape Eaglesmith's breakthrough studio sound in the mid-90s. ==Track listing== All songs written by Fred Eaglesmith. "Dusty" – 4:43 "Tunnel" – 3:44 "I 75" – 4:46 "Ship" – 4:36 "Rainbow" – 3:53 "Wichita" – 7:11 "Crowds" – 5:21 "Hey Baby" – 3:12 "Codeine" – 5:03 "Carne del Toro" – 3:29 ==Personnel== Fred Eaglesmith – vocals, wurlitzer funmaker Scott Merritt – gut string guitar, bass, hammond, glockenspiel, samples, wurlitzer, acoustic guitar, reed organ, drums, baritone guitar David Hetherington – cello Winonna Zelenka – cello Maurizio Baccante – cello Roman Borys – cello Paul Intson – bass on 1, 4, 7 Peter Von Althon – drums on 1, 6, 9; percussion on 9, 10; tambourine on 6 Matt Keighan – drums on 3, 4, 8 Darcy Yates – bass on 5 strings conducted by Dan Parr string arrangements by Dan Parr and Scott Merritt ==Reception== Of the album, Jason Schneider at Exclaim! said, "(it) immediately proves to be a radical departure, and a thoroughly welcome one. ... (A)im(ing) for classic Memphis blue-eyed soul(, i)t doesn't exactly achieve this goal. Instead, the album could be the equivalent of Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska if it had been recorded with ProTools. ... (I)n the process, (Eaglesmith) and Merritt created something entirely different, and like a newborn colt, beautiful in its own awkward way."
[ "Fred Eaglesmith", "The Sydney Morning Herald", "Wurlitzer organ", "Pro Tools", "Bruce Springsteen", "Scott Merritt", "Hammond organ", "blue-eyed soul", "A Major Label", "alternative country", "Milly's Cafe", "The Official Bootleg Series Volume 2: The Fred Eaglesmith Texas Weekend 2004", "Exclaim!", "Nebraska (album)" ]
62,108,760
File:North Carolina Museum of History logo.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[ "Raleigh, North Carolina", "North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources", "North Carolina Museum of History" ]
62,108,767
Category:Covered bridges in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Sullivan County, Pennsylvania" ]
62,108,768
Archaeology of the post-1500s Philippines
The post-1500s Philippines is defined by colonial powers occupying the land. Whether it be the Spanish, the Americans, or the Japanese, the Philippines were subjugated and shaped by the presence of a hegemonic power enacting dominance over the people, the land, and the culture itself. The respective field of the archaeology of the post-1500s Philippines is a particularly growing and revolutionary field, particularly seen in the archaeology of Stephen Acabado in Ifugao and Grace Barretto-Tesoro in Manila. There were also many important events that had happened during this period. In 1521, Portuguese explorer, Ferdinand Magellan discovered Homonhon Island and called it "Arcigelago de San Lazaro." Magellan became the first European to cross over the Pacific Ocean. The Post-1500s Philippines is an era of Philippine history defined by complex relationships between various ethnic groups underneath the umbrella of colonialism. Of particular note regarding the archaeology of the time period is Spanish colonialism and indigenous responses, particularly those of the Ifugao people. Recent scholarship has debunked preexistent narratives regarding the era of Spanish colonialism, particular considering indigenous responses and the complexities of ethnic diversity in the Spanish colony and its respective effects on the multicultural identity that defined the era. == Context == The Post-1500s Philippines and the respective archaeology of the time period are inextricably connected to Spanish colonialism. One of their main purposes of Spanish occupation of the Philippine Archipelago was founded upon the conceived notion that it was a land of spices, which it was not. The Spaniards also came to the Philippines in the search for God, gold, and glory. In their desire to spread God, they found plenty of indigenous peoples who had not yet been introduced to Christianity. Bankoff and Boomgard further state that "glory was less certain; there were a few opportunities for gallant feats of arms and no mighty empires to topple," displaying that there was a lack of all three Gs. Instead, they looked at the trees that the forest provided and used the huge amounts of timber to reconstruct churches and build ships, which led to Spain’s establishment of a colony in the Philippines. During this time Spain was leading in the race in European colonial endeavors. The Philippines was one of many places that Spain traveled to in order to build political ties and benefit economically. After the Spanish officially arrived in the Philippines, it took many years and several expeditions in order to achieve a piece of the lucrative spice trade, create political connections with China and Japan, and convert of local populations to Christianity. The Spanish foreign power invasion began with the establishment of settlements in Cebu in 1565 followed by the establishment of their capital in Manila in 1571. === Magat Valley === Through relative dating techniques and exact dating techniques, archeologists have been able to study soil and faunal records, beads, pots, and architectural wonders from the lowlands of the Magat Valley and the upland Cordillera. It is through these findings that archeologists determined that the Ifugao people who ended up in the upland Cordillera had originally lived in the lowlands of the Magat Valley. This enacting of the Laws of the Indies is reflected in the municipality of San Juan, where the archaeological record provides evidence of a plaza complex in the Philippines, with households, a church, a municipal hall, and household units constructed from tuff blocks, mortar, roof tiles, galvanized iron sheets, and wooden boards. Excavations in the area found that all of the necessary aspects and elements of a colonial town were archaeologically present in Barangay Pinagbayanan, the specific location in San Juan that included the aforementioned remains. and had two specific roles. The two roles it fulfilled were as a residential area for ethnic Chinese and as the commercial center for the colony itself. Fujian is the homeland of many of the many diasporic Chinese, specifically the southern province known as Minnan. Though there was a connection to their homeland as seen in the porcelain found in Parian, the diasporic Chinese had significant connections to the localities and peoples in Manila. Colonial-style earthenware and indigenous decorative earthenware were all found in Parian, evidence of the Chinese diaspora’s potential networking with other ethnic groups. == Galleon trade system == The Manila-Acapulco Trade system was an important aspect in the Philippines that was in place for about 200 years between 1600-1800. This trade network connected China, Southeast Asia, Mexico (New Spain), and Europe. Many goods were passed from the East to the West and vice versa during this time period. One of the most prominent goods that were traded from east to west was porcelain trade ware produced in China. === Trade post locations === Both China and Southeast Asia were rich with exotic goods that were in high demand in European countries between 1600-1800. Those wealthy enough to afford foreign luxury goods from the East sought out products such as Chinese porcelain, silk, and spices. This demand for foreign luxury goods, such as porcelain, was what led to the development of the Manila-Acapulco Trade. The Manila-Acapulco Trade was a trade network in which goods from China traveled down to trading ports in Manila, that then moved from Manila to Acapulco, and finally traveled from Acapulco to Spain where the goods made their way throughout Europe all via Spanish trade ships. This connection between the East and the West is what fueled porcelain trade ware production in China because there was finally a way to transport the porcelain in high quantities from China to Europe. === Exotic goods on demand === Prior to this trade network, foreign luxury goods such as Chinese porcelain were hard to come by in Europe because it was hard to get porcelain to Europe. The demand was always high for these goods, and the Manila- Acapulco Trade was simply the key to satisfying it. With the high demand for porcelain in Europe, and the Manila-Acapulco Trade established as a way to transport high quantities of it, the production of trade ware in China sky-rocketed. The Chinese produced high quantities of porcelain to be sent to Europe via the Manila-Acapulco Trade, and in return, they received European silver. Thus, I could also argue that the Manila-Acapulco Trade system fueled higher production of porcelain trade ware in China because of the Chinese demand for European silver. With the Manila-Acapulco Trade system as a way to finally meet the high demands for silver in China, the porcelain trade ware production increased to have more to trade in exchange for silver. The Manila-Acapulco Trade system served as a way to connect the East and the West in many ways. However, it mostly served as a way for the East to acquire silver from the West and for the West to acquire porcelain from the East. This new system of access between worlds is what made satisfying these demands a reality and as a result, porcelain trade wear production in China increased to meet these demands. == Redefining narratives == Studies of colonial history often paint a narrative that is predicated on two myths. The first would be the Spanish establishment of trade networks and the second would be the passive victimization of those affected by colonialism. What the post-1500s archaeology of the Philippines manages to do is redefine those narratives. The pervasive narratives that paint the Spanish as a singular force with no resistance are fictional in nature, as pericolonial responses by the Ifugao and the hybridity seen in Manila depict. The Spanish did not establish the complex networks of trade but rather inserted themselves within a complex multicultural network that had already been established. The archaeological work done regarding the post-1500s Philippines works to craft a new narrative that departs from the colonial underpinnings of Philippine archaeology as a whole. Through giving a voice to those marginalized in historical contexts, the archaeology of the post-1500s Philippines redefines the history of the Philippines itself.
[ "Parián (Manila)", "tuff", "Stephen Acabado", "Ifugao", "Barangay Pinagbayanan", "Boxer Codex", "ethnic groups in the Philippines", "Grace Barretto-Tesoro", "Homonhon Island", "Magat Valley", "Galleon trade", "Ifugao people", "Laws of the Indies", "Old Kiyyangan Village" ]
62,108,776
Edward Anders
Edward Anders (born June 21, 1926) is a Latvian-born American chemist and emeritus professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago. His major areas of research have included the origin and ages of meteorites, the existence of presolar grains in meteorites, the Solar System abundance of chemical elements, and mass extinctions in Earth history. In the 1970s, he was one of the 142 principal investigators who studied lunar samples brought back to Earth by the Apollo program. After retiring from scientific research in 1991, he became a prominent researcher, speaker and writer on issues related to the Holocaust in Latvia. == Early life and education == Anders was born Edward Alperovitch in the Latvian coastal city of Liepāja in 1926. Both his mother (Erica, née Sheftelovitch-Meiran) and his father (Adolf) were part of a German-speaking Jewish merchant community. In 1940, the Soviet Union occupied Latvia, and in 1941, Latvia was invaded by Nazi Germany. Anders's father was among many Liepaja Jews murdered by the Nazis in the early months of the occupation. Anders and his mother evaded Nazi annihilation by pretending that she was an Aryan foundling raised by Jews, until they were able to flee Latvia near the end of World War II. After the end of the war, Anders settled in Munich, where he attended first the UNRRA University, a makeshift institution created by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration solely to serve refugees, and then the University of Munich. In August 1948, Anders appeared as a prosecution witness at the Nuremberg High Command Trial, where he gave evidence of German soldiers carrying out lootings and shooting Jewish civilians in Liepaja during 1941. In 1949, Anders arrived in New York City, where he embarked on a master's degree in chemistry at Columbia University. He earned a Ph.D. from Columbia in 1954, benefiting from the mentorship of Columbia nuclear-chemistry professor Jack Malcolm Miller. == Career == Anders spent most of his scientific career on the chemistry faculty at the University of Chicago. He arrived as an assistant professor in 1955, gained tenure a few years later and was named the Horace B. Horton professor in 1973. He spent 1963–64 at the University of Bern as a visiting professor on sabbatical; he returned to the Swiss university for six shorter stays from 1970–1990. His first academic appointment was as an instructor at the University of Illinois (Champaign-Urbana) from 1954 to 1955. In 1959, Anders won the Newcomb Cleveland Prize from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for his work on meteorites and asteroids. His findings during this period included evidence that meteorites come from the asteroid belt, and an explanation for the ways tiny diamonds could be created in meteorites, without requiring the enormous pressure that could only be found in larger bodies with greater gravitational forces. In 1973, Anders received the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal, Anders and colleagues began documenting evidence of stardust within meteorites in 1978, publishing findings in Science suggesting that "primitive meteorites contain yet another kind of alien, presolar material: dust grains ejected from red giants." Subsequent research by Anders and coworkers established the presence of diamonds, silicon carbide and graphite in meteorites' interstellar grains. In a 1991 interview with Discover, Anders referred to meteorites as "the poor man's space probe." In the 1980s, Anders and colleagues published evidence in Science and Nature of catastrophic fires 65 million years ago, caused by a giant meteorite crash in the Gulf of Mexico. Their research on the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event analyzed silt sediments from sites as far away as Europe and New Zealand. In each case, they found high amounts of iridium (a rare element associated with certain meteorites) and massive amounts of carbon (associated with global fires) in the same layers. "The first year after the impact was a dramatic and dangerous period for life on Earth," Anders told The New York Times. In 1989, Anders and Belgian astronomer Nicolas Grevesse published "Abundances of the Elements," a scientific paper cataloging the most reliable estimates to date of meteorite and solar abundances of more than 80 elements, ranging from hydrogen to uranium. Their findings have been cited in more than 11,000 subsequent papers by other scientific researchers, according to Google Scholar. == Holocaust research == In 2003, Anders and co-author Juris Dubrovskis published "Who Died in the Holocaust? Recovering Names From Official Records". Their article, which appeared in Holocaust & Genocide Studies, used Latvian, German, Israeli and other records to document the fate of each of Liepaja's 7,140 Jewish residents during Nazi Germany's occupation. Anders and Dubrovskis established that only 208 survived. In 2004, Latvia's president, Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, spoke at the dedication of a Holocaust memorial in Liepāja. She closed by saying: "I want to thank the Liepāja Holocaust Memorial Committee, its chairman Mr. Edward Anders, Mr. Vladimirs Bāns, the authors of the project, and all who lent a hand to make this Memorial become reality."
[ "U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum", "National Academy of Sciences", "Meteoritics and Planetary Science", "Geology of the Moon", "United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration", "Science (journal)", "the Holocaust", "meteorites", "Holocaust & Genocide Studies", "University of Bern", "Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event", "Nature (journal)", "presolar grains", "Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta", "Newcomb Cleveland Prize", "J. Lawrence Smith Medal", "University of Illinois", "Contemporary European History", "Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga", "American Association for the Advancement of Science", "Leonard Medal", "Meteoritical Society", "Holocaust and Genocide Studies", "Meteoritics & Planetary Science", "University of Chicago", "High Command Trial", "Discover (magazine)", "Geochemical Society", "Columbia University", "The New York Times", "Cosmochemistry", "Solar System", "V. M. Goldschmidt Award", "Liepāja", "NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal", "Royal Astronomical Society", "Apollo program", "Nicolas Grevesse" ]
62,108,779
Willamette Valley Southern Railway
The Willamette Valley Southern Railway was a railroad in Oregon that ran from Portland, Oregon, where it connected to the trolley line, through Molalla, Oregon, where it connected to the Eastern & Western Logging Railroad as well as Southern Pacific, to Mt. Angel, Oregon. The line was reorganized from the Clackamas Southern after facing financial troubles in 1915 and closed in 1933. Like many short lines of Oregon at the time, it ran off electricity from hydroelectric dams. For the last three years the line stopped just outside of Molalla. Only 400 feet of the railroad remains intact, nudged over a few feet from its original position of the Oregon Pacific Railroad. The Railroad used ALCo freight motors, as well as electric passenger cars similar to today's lightrail train cars. No original depots remain except a replica shelter north of Molalla. The railroad was sustained by logging operations in Molalla and when those ended in 1933 the railroad went bankrupt. Evidence of the former route is most prevalent in and south of Molalla List of stops on the line, north to south: Golf Junction, Hendee, Milwaukie, Lakewood, Oak Grove, Naef, Ashdale, Meldrum, Gladstone, Oregon City Robbins, Beaver Creek, Ingram, Spangler, Buckner Creek, Mulino, Liberal (connection with Southern Pacific, only remaining portion of the line now a spur) (Depot closed in the 1920s), Molalla (connection with Eastern & Western Logging Line), Kaylor. (Past this point closed in 1930) Yoder, Monitor, Mt. Angel (terminus with loop track, also connection to Southern Pacific).
[ "lightrail", "Southern Pacific Transportation Company", "ALCo", "Oregon City, Oregon", "Milwaukie, Oregon", "Hydroelectricity", "Molalla, Oregon", "Portland, Oregon", "Oregon Pacific Railroad (1880–1894)" ]
62,108,789
Category:Christian radio stations in Louisiana
[]
62,108,793
Sandy Collier
Sandy Collier was inducted into the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in 2011. Collier was named one of the "Top 50 Riders of All Time in All Disciplines” by Horse & Rider magazine. ==Life== Collier was born in Massachusetts. At age 6, Collier started showing horses in an English saddle. In 1972, at age 19, Collier was employed at the Tajiguas Ranch in Santa Barbara, California. She performed a wide variety of chores for the ranch. In 1980 she began her own business training. In 1992, two of her clients, David and Paula Hunsicker had her search for a snaffle bit prospect. At the Tejon Ranch, she met future NRCHA hall of famer Doug Williamson and found the horse. There was something about one mare that piqued her attention. Collier bought Miss Rey Dry and won the 1993 Snaffle Bit Futurity Open Championship. Collier is the only woman to win this race. She resides in Buellton, California. ==Career== Collier won the AQHA Jr. Cow Horse World Championship. She won the NRCHA Hackamore Classic Championship. She is the first woman winner of the NRCHA World Champion Snaffle Bit Futurity. In 2001, Collier won the Futurity Open Reserve Championship. In 2002, she won the AQHA Junior Working Cow Horse World Championship on Sheza Shinette. Collier is a AAA-rated NRCHA judge. She's also a member of the NRCHA Board of Directors. 2013 National Reined Cow Horse Association Hall of Fame Western Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Monty Roberts of Join-Up
[ "Santa Barbara, California", "National Reined Cow Horse Association Hall of Fame", "Massachusetts", "Horse & Rider", "Buellton, California", "National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame" ]
62,108,797
Kyle Nelson (fighter)
Kyle Nelson (born April 20, 1991) is a Canadian mixed martial artist who competes in the UFC Featherweight division. He previously competed for the RXF promotion, as well as Elite 1 MMA. Nelson is a former featherweight champion in Elite 1 MMA. ==Mixed martial arts career== ===Early career=== Born and raised in Huntsville, Ontario Canada, Nelson began competing in mixed martial arts in 2011. He held a 2–1 amateur record and then competed in local North American professional promotions. During this time he won the Elite 1 MMA Featherweight Championship, and also fought for the Lightweight Championship in TXC MMA. He then signed with the RXF in Romania, Europe, and after with the UFC in 2018. ===Ultimate Fighting Championship=== Nelson made his promotional debut on December 8, 2018, on short notice against Carlos Diego Ferreira, replacing Jesse Ronson at UFC 231. He lost the fight via TKO in the second round. Returning to Featherweight Nelson next faced Matt Sayles on May 4, 2019, at UFC on ESPN+ 9. He lost the fight via submission via arm-triangle choke 3:16 into round 3. Nelson fought next at UFC on ESPN+ 17 on September 21, 2019 against Marco Polo Reyes. He won the fight via TKO at 1:36 of round 1, earning him his first UFC victory. Nelson was scheduled to face Sean Woodson in a catchweight bout of 150 pounds on June 27, 2020 at UFC on ESPN: Poirier vs. Hooker. However, Nelson was pulled form the event due to visa issue and he was replaced by Julian Erosa. Nelson faced Billy Quarantillo on September 12, 2020 at UFC Fight Night: Santos vs. Teixeira. He lost the fight via knockout in the third round. Nelson faced Jai Herbert on July 23, 2022 at UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs. Aspinall. He lost the fight by unanimous decision. Nelson faced Choi Doo-ho on February 4, 2023, at UFC Fight Night 218. The fight ended via majority draw. Nelson faced Blake Bilder on June 10, 2023, at UFC 289. He won the bout via unanimous decision. Nelson faced Fernando Padilla on September 16, 2023, at UFC Fight Night 227. He won the fight via unanimous decision. Nelson faced Bill Algeo on March 30, 2024, at UFC on ESPN 54. He won the fight via technical knockout in round one. Nelson was scheduled to face Calvin Kattar on September 7, 2024, at UFC Fight Night 242. However, Kattar withdrew from the bout and was replaced by Steve Garcia. At the weigh-ins, Nelson weighed in at 148.5 pounds, two and a half pounds over the featherweight non-title fight limit. The bout proceeded at catchweight and he was fined 20 percent of his purse, which went to Garcia. Nelson lost the fight by technical knockout via elbows and punches in the first round. ==Championships and accomplishments== Elite1 Mixed Martial Arts Featherweight Championship ==Mixed martial arts record== |- |Loss |align=center|16–6–1 |Steve Garcia |TKO (elbows and punches) |UFC Fight Night: Burns vs. Brady | |align=center|1 |align=center|3:59 |Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- |Win |align=center|16–5–1 |Bill Algeo |TKO (punches) |UFC on ESPN: Blanchfield vs. Fiorot | |align=center|1 |align=center|4:00 |Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States | |- |Win |align=center| |Fernando Padilla |Decision (unanimous) |UFC Fight Night: Grasso vs. Shevchenko 2 | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- |Win |align=center| |Blake Bilder |Decision (unanimous) |UFC 289 | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | |- |Draw |align=center| |Choi Doo-ho |Draw (majority) |UFC Fight Night: Lewis vs. Spivac | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- |Loss |align=center|13–5 |Jai Herbert |Decision (unanimous) |UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs. Aspinall | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |London, England | |- |Loss |align=center|13–4 |Billy Quarantillo |KO (punch) |UFC Fight Night: Waterson vs. Hill | |align=center|3 |align=center|0:07 |Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center|13–3 | Polo Reyes | TKO (punches) | UFC Fight Night: Rodríguez vs. Stephens | |align=center|1 |align=center|1:36 | Mexico City, Mexico | |- |Loss | align=center|12–3 | Matt Sayles | Submission (arm-triangle choke) | UFC Fight Night: Iaquinta vs. Cowboy | |align=center|3 |align=center|3:16 | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada | |- | Loss | align=center|12–2 | Carlos Diego Ferreira | TKO (punches) | UFC 231 | | align=center|2 | align=center|1:23 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center|12–1 | Morteza Rezaei | TKO (punches) | RXF 32 | | align=center|1 | align=center|4:57 | Brașov, Romania | |- | Win | align=center| 11–1 | Khama Worthy | KO (punches) | BTC 1: Genesis | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:03 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 10–1 | Gabriel Mănucă | Submission (rear naked choke) | RXF 26 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 3:50 | Brașov, Romania | |- | Win | align=center| 9–1 | Jonathan Brookins | Decision (split) | Fight Night 2 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 8–1 | Zoltán Turi | Submission (rear naked choke) | RXF 23: Romania vs. United Kingdom | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:23 | Bucharest, Romania | |- | Win | align=center| 7–1 | Justin Bourgeois | TKO (Punches) | Elite 1 MMA | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 2:01 | Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada | |- | Loss | align=center| 6–1 | Adrian Hadribeaj | Decision (unanimous) | TXC Legends 6 | | align=center| 5 | align=center| 5:00 | Novi, Michigan, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 6–0 | Ainsley Robinson | Submission (guillotine choke) | SCC 2 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 0:42 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 5–0 | Alex Halkias | Decision (unanimous) | PFC 2 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | London, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 4–0 | Neelan Hordatt | Decision (split) | ECC 11: Redemption | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 3–0 | Maxime Dubois | TKO (punches) | UGC 32: Moment de Vérité | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 1:36 | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 2–0 | Jo Petahtegoose | Submission (armbar) | Score Fighting Series 6 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 2:54 | Sarnia, Ontario, Canada | |- | Win | align=center| 1–0 | Michael Dufort | Decision (unanimous) | Ringside MMA 13 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | |-
[ "Brașov", "Choi Doo-ho", "Montreal, Quebec", "London, Ontario", "mixed martial artist", "UFC Fight Night 242", "Atlantic City, New Jersey", "Marco Polo Reyes", "UFC Fight Night 218", "Novi, Michigan", "UFC 289", "UFC on ESPN: Poirier vs. Hooker", "2017 in RXF", "Huntsville, Ontario", "Toronto, Ontario", "List of current UFC fighters", "UFC Fight Night: Waterson vs. Hill", "2018 in RXF", "2016 in RXF", "UFC on ESPN+ 9", "Jonathan Brookins", "UFC Fight Night: Iaquinta vs. Cowboy", "Medicine Hat, Alberta", "Steve Garcia", "UFC Fight Night: Santos vs. Teixeira", "UFC Fight Night 227", "Bucharest", "Las Vegas, Nevada", "List of Canadian UFC fighters", "Matt Sayles", "Stoney Creek, Ontario", "UFC Fight Night: Burns vs. Brady", "Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu", "Featherweight (MMA)", "Jai Herbert", "UFC on ESPN 54", "Billy Quarantillo", "Lightweight (MMA)", "Sarnia, Ontario", "UFC Fight Night: Lewis vs. Spivac", "UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs. Aspinall", "Carlos Diego Ferreira", "Ultimate Fighting Championship", "Bill Algeo", "London", "UFC on ESPN: Blanchfield vs. Fiorot", "UFC", "Jesse Ronson", "UFC on ESPN+ 17", "Khama Worthy", "Julian Erosa", "UFC Fight Night: Grasso vs. Shevchenko 2", "UFC 231", "Moncton, New Brunswick", "List of male mixed martial artists", "Calvin Kattar", "Polo Reyes", "Mexico City", "Sean Woodson", "UFC Fight Night: Rodríguez vs. Stephens", "List of PFC events", "Vancouver, British Columbia", "RXF", "Ottawa, Ontario" ]
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Category:Christian radio stations in Oklahoma
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File:Monarto Safari Park logo 2019.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
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File:WCW Power Plant logo 2000.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[ "World Wrestling Entertainment" ]
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Category:Christian radio stations in Alaska
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Category:Defunct religious radio stations in the United States
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Category:Christian radio stations in Oregon
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Category:Covered bridges in Berks County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Berks County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Berks County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Category:2016 disasters in Asia
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Category:Covered bridges in Erie County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Erie County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Erie County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Johann Balhorn the Younger
Johann Balhorn the Younger (sometimes mistakenly spelled Ballhorn) (born 1550, died after 1604) was a German printer in Lübeck. He followed his father, Johann Balhorn the Elder in the printing trade, from whom he took over the printing house. Both used as a monogram the pictured printer's mark and a seal with a horn and three balls. In a play on their name the German word verballhornen, which means "parody", was coined. ==Life== Johann Balhorn was the son of the printer Johann Balhorn the Elder and his second or third wife Elsabe (died after 18 October 1588). He had at least five siblings, two of whom died in childhood. The printer Jochim Balhorn, who died in 1559, was either his grandfather or uncle. The elder Balhorn died in 1573, and his son took over his father's printing business in his own name in 1575, shortly after he attained legal age. In 1578 he married Ermgard Ehlers (born 1555 probably in Lübeck, died 1595 or later). The couple had no known children. In 1584 he and Asswerus Kröger were the only accredited book printers in Lübeck. He primarily printed religious works and textbooks, but above all he expanded the existing assortment of "anything from almanacs, occasional poetry and pamphlets to eiifying works, sermons, and statute books." In addition he printed practical works, for example, how to navigate with sextants, the determination of ebb and flow, or about mercantile accounting. "Both the range of his books and the craftsmanship with which he executed them were fairly average." to "disimprove." The property of the Johann Balhorn family included the houses Königstraße 61 (1534–1569), Breite Straße 60 (southern half, 1541–1588), Hundestrasse 19, 21, 23 (1554–1588) and Hüxstraße 64 (1587–1604). Between 1588 and early 1604 he sold the landed property of the family in Lübeck. This may have been because of long-standing economic difficulties due to increasing competition. After 1604, the year of his last known publication, all track of him is lost.
[ "Lübeck", "Historia von D. Johann Fausten (chapbook)", "Lübeck law", "High German", "Johann Balhorn the Elder", "printer (publishing)", "Josef Benzing", "Low German" ]
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Category:EHC Wolfsburg players
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Category:Covered bridges in Indiana County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Indiana County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Indiana County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Canadian Martyrs Elementary School
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page. The result was redirect to Waterloo Catholic District School Board. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 15:35, 27 October 2019 (UTC) ===:Canadian Martyrs Elementary School=== – (View AfDView log Stats) () Delete, elementary schools are not typically considered notable. Presented as is this seems to be run of the mil elementary school that does not meet GNG Hell in a Bucket (talk) 03:13, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Schools-related deletion discussions. Hell in a Bucket (talk) 03:13, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Education-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 05:07, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Canada-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 05:07, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Delete Does not satisfy WP:ORG or WP:GNG. Hughesdarren (talk) 06:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Redirect: WP:BLANKANDREDIRECT (an expansion of a policy, as per long standing practice for non notable schools, especially primary and middlde schools, and as evidenced by 1,000s of redirects). nominators should be aware of this, or should be suitably qualified New Page Patrollers. Kudpung กุดผึ้ง (talk) 06:51, 24 October 2019 (UTC) User:Kudpung that guideline states it is an option not a mandate. You might find value in a redirect I do not and therefore requested deletion. Hell in a Bucket (talk) 14:31, 24 October 2019 (UTC) Redirect to Waterloo Catholic District School Board per longstanding community consensus illustrated at WP:SCHOOLOUTCOMES and WP:ATD. The school name is a very likely search term and there is info at the district's article. Aren't we supposed to be helping our readers with our actions? John from Idegon (talk) 20:59, 26 October 2019 (UTC) I don't see it linking to an overall district as much of a help, it doesn't hurt either. I suppose I'm open to that as an alternative to deletion. More then one way to solve a problem. Hell in a Bucket (talk) 03:06, 27 October 2019 (UTC) The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
[ "WP:GNG", "Canadian Martyrs Elementary School", "WP:ATD", "WP:ORG", "WP:ATD-R", "WP:BLANKANDREDIRECT", "Waterloo Catholic District School Board", "WP:SCHOOLOUTCOMES" ]
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Template:Video game lists by genre
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Category:Kloten Flyers players
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