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Oscar D. Hollenbeck
Oscar D. Hollenbeck was an American football coach and player. He served as the head football coach at Westminster College in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania for one season, in 1910, compiling a record of 6–2. He played college football at Colgate University, lettering from 1907 to 1909. He spent one year with the Akron Indians of the Ohio League. ==Head coaching record==
[ "Center (gridiron football)", "Colgate Raiders football", "Westminster College (Pennsylvania)", "New Wilmington, Pennsylvania", "Guard (gridiron football)", "college football", "Westminster Titans football", "American football", "1910 college football season", "Akron Indians", "Colgate University", "Ohio League" ]
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Category:2010s disasters in Asia
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Category:Dornbirner EC players
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Category:Covered bridges in Franklin County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Franklin County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Franklin County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Category:Alba Volán Székesfehérvár players
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Category:Christian radio stations in California
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Category:Disasters in Asia by decade
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Arthur W. Raymond
Arthur W. "Bugs" Raymond was an American football coach and player. He served as the head football coach at Ohio Northern University from 1914 to 1915, compiling a record of 8–9–1. Raymond played for the Canton Bulldogs (1915) and Youngstown Patricians (1916) of the Ohio League. ==Head coaching record==
[ "Canton Bulldogs", "Ohio Northern Polar Bears", "Ohio Northern Polar Bears football", "Guard (gridiron football)", "Youngstown Patricians", "1914 college football season", "Ohio State Buckeyes football", "1915 college football season", "Tackle (gridiron football position)", "American football", "Ohio League", "Ohio Northern University" ]
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Category:Disasters in Asia by year
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Kamala (film)
Kamala is a 2019 Indian Malayalam-language thriller film written, produced and directed by Ranjith Sankar. The film stars Ruhani Sharma in the title role, with Aju Varghese playing the male lead. It also features Anoop Menon and Biju Sopanam in supporting roles. The film's music was composed by Anand Madhusoodanan while Shehnad Jalal served as the cinematographer. Kamala was theatrically released on 29 November 2019. ==Plot== Kamala follows 36 hours in the life of Safar (Aju Varghese), a real-estate broker, and Kamala (Ruhani Sharma), a mysterious traveller whom Safar met during a brokerage six months prior to the events of the film. Kamala travels to Athirappilly to meet Safar, who is in the middle of a tribal land deal. Safar takes her to his friend's resort in the middle of Athirappilly forest where he plans to make a move on her. Kamala, who appears to have ulterior motives, goes missing. The movie progresses through Safar's search for Kamala's real identity and her motives. == Cast == Aju Varghese as Safar The film opened with positive response from critics and praised Aju Varghese's performance.
[ "Anoop Menon", "Athirappilly", "Ruhani Sharma", "Anand Madhusoodanan", "Rajendran", "Ranjith Sankar", "Shehnad Jalal", "Sunil Sukhada", "Gokulan (actor)", "Malayalam", "Aju Varghese", "Biju Sopanam", "The Hindu", "Malayala Manorama", "thriller film" ]
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Portal:Current events/2019 October 21
[ "Opioid epidemic in the United States", "Robert Fico", "Prime Minister of Slovakia", "Chilean President", "Ohio", "Sergey Lavrov", "Sebastián Piñera", "minority government", "official party status", "Conservative Party of Canada", "Canada", "2019–20 Lebanese protests", "Justin Trudeau", "Syrian Civil War", "Murder of Ján Kuciak", "U.S. federal court", "2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria", "New Zealand–United Kingdom relations", "Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi", "Liberal Party of Canada", "Pacific Ocean", "Lebanon", "Kinshasa", "Teva Pharmaceuticals", "Winston Peters", "AmerisourceBergen", "aircraft carrier", "McKesson", "Empire of Japan", "Andrew Scheer", "2019 Chilean protests", "Syria", "Slovakia", "2019 Canadian federal election", "Bloc Québécois", "United Kingdom", "World War II", "2019 Bolivian protests", "Minister of Foreign Affairs (Russia)", "the Democratic Republic of Congo", "Cleveland", "Battle of Midway", "2019 Bolivian general election", "Bolivia", "Russia", "Kurds" ]
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Category:Covered bridges in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Dauphin County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page. The result was delete. Consensus that there isn't any sourcing to enable it to pass either GNG, NFILM or NFO Nosebagbear (talk) 14:05, 27 October 2019 (UTC) ===:Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11=== – (View AfDView log Stats) () No sources found, no notability asserted but A7 doesn't apply to films. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 03:33, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Film-related deletion discussions. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 03:33, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Delete I could not find any in-depth coverage to meet WP:GNG. --Crystallizedcarbon (talk) 07:42, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Delete The article has no sources and I cannot find any WP:SIGCOV on the Web, only inclusion in lists. Thus fails WP:NFILM's WP:NFP and fails WP:GNG. Also no other evidence of notability as a film (WP:NFO). -Lopifalko (talk) 08:04, 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", "WP:SIGCOV", "Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11", "WP:NFO", "WP:NFILM", "WP:NFP" ]
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Category:Almoravid generals
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Category:University of Kharkiv
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Category:University of Kharkiv alumni
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Category:Covered bridges in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Northumberland County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Walkers Point, Queensland
{{Infobox Australian place | type = suburb | name = Walkers Point | city = | state = qld | image = | caption = | coordinates = | pop = 75 | pop_year = | pop_footnotes = In the , Walkers Point had a population of 75 people. The land is predominantly crop growing (mostly sugarcane) with some grazing on native vegetation. == Demographics == In the , Walkers Point had a population of 98 people. In the , Walkers Point had a population of 75 people. == Education == There are no schools in Walkers Point. The nearest government primary school is Granville State School in neighbouring Granville to the south-west. The nearest government secondary school is Maryborough State High School in Maryborough to the west.
[ "Dundathu, Queensland", "Island Plantation, Queensland", "Granville, Queensland", "Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)", "Brisbane", "St Helens, Queensland (Fraser Coast Region)", "Queensland", "Hervey Bay", "Pastoralism", "Maryborough, Queensland", "Queensland Government", "Mary River (Queensland)", "Prawle, Queensland", "sugarcane", "Fraser Coast Region", "Division of Wide Bay", "Maryborough State High School", "Suburbs and localities (Australia)", "Beaver Rock, Queensland", "Boonooroo Plains, Queensland", "AEST" ]
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Father Joseph Dyer
RedirectThe Exorcist (franchise)
[ "The Exorcist (franchise)" ]
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Category:Covered bridges in Clinton County, Pennsylvania
Covered bridges in Clinton County, Pennsylvania.
[ "Clinton County, Pennsylvania" ]
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Category:Christian radio stations in Nebraska
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Category:Christian radio stations in Florida
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Category:University of Savoy alumni
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Category:Works about John Banville
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Category:21st-century women singers by nationality
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Category:Christian radio stations in Washington (state)
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Yared Abetew
Yared Abetew (born 15 June 1999), is an Australian professional soccer player who plays as a defender for National Premier Leagues Victoria club Green Gully. ==Club career== ===Adelaide United=== On 20 October 2019, Abetew made his debut in the A-League, against Melbourne City in a 2–1 loss which involved an ankle injury forcing him substituting off at half-time. At age 21, he was promoted to the senior squad for the 2020–21 A-League season on 28 December 2020. ==Personal life== Born in Australia, Abetew is of Ethiopian descent. ==Career statistics== ===Club===
[ "association football", "Defender (association football)", "National Premier Leagues South Australia", "2019–20 Adelaide United FC season", "2021 National Premier Leagues", "Adelaide City FC", "FK Beograd (Australia)", "Adelaide", "Green Gully SC", "National Premier Leagues Northern NSW", "Melbourne City FC", "2022 National Premier Leagues", "Croydon Kings", "Football Australia", "White City FC", "National Premier Leagues Victoria", "A-League", "Adelaide United FC", "2020–21 Adelaide United FC season", "Newcastle Olympic FC", "2020–21 A-League", "Facebook", "Adelaide United FC Youth", "Midfielder" ]
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Template:Boston Common
[ "Davis v. Massachusetts", "Pope John Paul II Memorial (Boston)", "Robert Gould Shaw Memorial", "Oneida Football Club Monument", "Boston Christmas Tree", "Park Street station (MBTA)", "Parkman Plaza", "The Embrace", "Colonial Theatre (Boston)", "Boston Common, 8/17/71", "Boston Common", "Boston Common Tablet", "Friends of the Public Garden", "John Barry Tablet", "Soldiers and Sailors Monument (Boston)", "Brewer Fountain", "Central Burying Ground, Boston", "Boylston station", "The Partisans (sculpture)", "Boston Massacre Monument", "Temple Bell (Boston)", "Declaration of Independence Tablet", "commons:Category:Boston Common", "Liberty Tree", "The Founders Memorial", "Parkman Bandstand", "Great Elm (Boston)" ]
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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Curling at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Qualification
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page. The result was keep. Overwhelming consensus is that WP:CRYSTAL does not apply to Olympic events in this close proximity to the qualifying trials. (non-admin closure) 4meter4 (talk) 18:24, 27 October 2019 (UTC) ===:Curling at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Qualification=== – (View AfDView log Stats) () Its way too early for this article. The qualification system has not even been published yet. Per WP:CRYSTALBALL this article should be deleted. Sportsfan 1234 (talk) 04:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Sports-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 05:05, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Keep Even though it is very early, deleting it would cause someone to rewrite it. I would propose adding a hatnote template. The Olympics are explicitly listed as an exception on WP:CRYSTALBALL. Initramfs (talk) 13:46, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Yes, but the information on the page is all guesswork as nothing has been confirmed. Normally I would just redirect to the sport's page, but in this case that does not even exist, which should also demonstrate its too early for this article. Sportsfan 1234 (talk) 14:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC) It is not guesswork at all, it is sourced. The page has amendments here, and the changes are demonstrated in the updated rule book here (page 48-9). That is not to say that there is still not issues, buy argue using the facts.18abruce (talk) 15:28, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Keep Actually the qualification system was put forth at the recent congress and approved, as the sources on the page indicate. However, the point system for Olympic qualification has not been published yet. So the stages of qualification, and which tournaments matter, are known, but as the page indicates it is not the complete picture yet. I do not think that reflects the issue of CRYSTALBALL but it would not trouble me to have the page recreated when the imminent announcement is actually made.18abruce (talk) 14:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Move to draft, as per Draft:2022 in film. bd2412 T 22:31, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Keep When I created the page I was under the assumption that the rules for qualifying for 2022 would be the same for 2014 and 2018, which meant that the qualification period for 2014 started in 2010, and the qualification period for 2018 started in 2014, but with the rule changes for 2022 the first matches that would matter are 2020, which means the first qualifying point matches for this olympics are in March 2020 which is less than a half year away. And the qualification for the 2020 World Championships start in less than month, November 2019 (Pacific-Asia Curling Championship, European Curling Championships, World Mixed Doubles Qualification Event). Also, this page includes references to the Olympics expanding the number of Mixed Doubles teams participating in the Olympics from 8 to 10. Edwyth (talk) 23:09, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Keep If the qualification tournaments have been announced, and county towards the Olympics, then this is a keep per WP:CRYSTAL. Lugnuts Fire Walk with Me 16:28, 21 October 2019 (UTC) Speedy Keep Contrary to nom's assertinon, the qualification system has been released. As such, no valid reason has been given for deletion and I suggest withdrawal. Smartyllama (talk) 20:44, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Can you link to the official qualification system that has been published by the WCF and the IOC? You won't be able too, because it doesn't exist. Sportsfan 1234 (talk) 21:50, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Now come on sportsfan, the article clearly links an official WCF document that details how many teams qualify, how the qualification tournaments will work, who is eligible to play in them, and which tournaments count for automatic qualification. What is does not do is detail how (and if) the Olympic Qualification Points will change in this Olympic cycle for automatic qualification. It is true that there is no announcement yet of whether or not the IOC has approved the process, there needs to be some strong argument here as to why that on its own would be enough to delete the article.18abruce (talk) 23:06, 22 October 2019 (UTC) Keep, obviously. -- Earl Andrew - talk 02:56, 23 October 2019 (UTC) Keep - longstanding precedents exist for keeping such articles. Bearian (talk) 18:52, 26 October 2019 (UTC) The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
[ "WP:CRYSTALBALL", "WP:CRYSTAL", "WP:OUTCOMES", "Curling at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Qualification" ]
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2019–20 UIC Flames men's basketball team
The 2019–20 UIC Flames men's basketball team represented the University of Illinois at Chicago in the 2019–20 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flames, led by fifth-year head coach Steve McClain, played their home games at Credit Union 1 Arena in Chicago, Illinois as members of the Horizon League. The finished the season 18–17, 10–8 in Horizon League to play to finish in a tie for fourth place. As the No. 4 seed in the Horizon League tournament, they defeated IUPUI, Youngstown State, and top-seeded Wright State to advance to the championship game. There they lost to Northern Kentucky. Shortly after the season, the school announced that head coach Steve McClain would not return as coach of the Flames. A couple of weeks later, the school named Texas assistant coach Luke Yaklich as the Flames' new coach. ==Previous season== The Flames finished the 2018–19 season 16–16 overall, 10–8 in Horizon League play to finish in a tie for fourth place. In the Horizon League tournament, they were defeated by Green Bay in the quarterfinals. == 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
[ "Tony Harvey (basketball)", "ESPN+", "Auburn Hills, Michigan", "Athletics Center O'rena", "2019–20 Bradley Braves men's basketball team", "Horizon League", "Memphis, Tennessee", "2019–20 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team", "Wisconsin–Parkside Rangers", "Toronto", "Wolstein Center", "2019 Horizon League men's basketball tournament", "2019–20 Detroit Mercy Titans men's basketball team", "2019–20 DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball team", "2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "McDonough, Georgia", "Cork (city)", "Indiana Farmers Coliseum", "FedExForum", "2019–20 Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team", "Belleville, Illinois", "2020 Horizon League men's basketball tournament", "2019–20 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Canada", "Wintrust Arena", "ESPNU College Basketball", "Credit Union 1 Arena", "Gary, Indiana", "2019–20 Florida Atlantic Owls men's basketball team", "Dee Brown (basketball, born 1984)", "2019–20 Wright State Raiders men's basketball team", "2019–20 Ball State Cardinals men's basketball team", "Olivet Nazarene University", "2019–20 Mercer Bears men's basketball team", "Cleveland", "Youngstown, Ohio", "2019–20 Canisius Golden Griffins men's basketball team", "AP Poll", "Houston", "Normal, Illinois", "Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin", "Detroit", "Ontario", "Calihan Hall", "ESPN3", "2019–20 Robert Morris Colonials men's basketball team", "Nutter Center", "Indianapolis", "Peoria Civic Center", "BB&T Arena", "Resch Center", "University of Illinois at Chicago", "Chicago", "Las Vegas", "UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena", "FAU Arena", "Highland Heights, Kentucky", "2018–19 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team", "2019–20 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team", "2018–19 UIC Flames men's basketball team", "Beeghly Center", "2019–20 Memphis Tigers men's basketball team", "2019–20 Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball team", "2019–20 Northern Kentucky Norse men's basketball team", "Australia", "2019–20 Green Bay Phoenix men's basketball team", "Luke Yaklich", "Republic of Ireland", "San Bernardino, California", "2019–20 San Diego Toreros men's basketball team", "Milwaukee", "Montrose, Victoria", "Redbird Arena", "2019–20 IUPUI Jaguars men's basketball team", "Boca Raton, Florida", "Eastern Time Zone", "Fox Sports 1", "2019–20 Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team", "Ajax, Ontario", "Peoria, Illinois", "Steve McClain", "2019–20 Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's basketball team", "Fairborn, Ohio", "2019–20 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team", "ESPN College Basketball", "Texas Longhorns men's basketball" ]
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Johannesburg Reformed Church (NGK)
The Johannesburg Reformed Church was the first congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) to be founded in Johannesburg on August 14, 1887. All the congregations on the Witwatersrand stem from it, but by the 2010s, the NGK yearbook recorded only 90 in its ward which had long ceased to operate independently. == Background to congregation foundation == The city was part of the area served by the Heidelberg Reformed Church (NGK) until it got its own congregation. Landowners had been leaving the Cape Colony for the Highveld since around 1840 to escape British rule. Building on the efforts of the Rev. Abraham Kriel of the Du Toit’s Pan Reformed Church, his curate, proponent J.N. Martins, began preaching full-time on the Rand. The gold rush brought people from all over the world to the area. As far as can be determined, the Rev. Stephanus Jacobus du Toit, the Superintendent of Education of the South African Republic, led the first NGK service in Johannesburg. At the open-air service, held on a Sunday in mid-1886 in the shadow of a willow tree near where the later Langlaagte Reformed Church and Abraham Kriel Orphanage would later stand. Rev. Du Toit sermonized on Genesis 2:12, “and the gold of that land is good.” The NGK contingent among the new settlers of the Rand largely settled in the western portion of what is now downtown, in what was then known as the “Dip.” This included the poorer neighborhoods of Langlaagte, Fordsburg, and Vrededorp, the only portions of the area then that were majority-Afrikaner. The wealthier northern (Parktown, Houghton) and northeastern (Observatory, Orange Grove) neighborhoods were almost exclusively English. Upwardly mobile Afrikaners later settled in large numbers in the northwestern areas such as Melville, Westdene, Auckland Park, Northcliff, Linden, and Randburg, among others. To a lesser extent than in the “Dip,” Afrikaners also settled in the area of Jeppestown, just east of downtown. Consequently, while 14 NGK congregations sprang up in the 8 km west of city hall, 5 were founded to the east. == Foundation == The church council of Du Toit’s Pan, chaired by Rev. Kriel, assigned its curate, proponent J.N. Martins, in their words, to “preach the gospel to our brothers in the goldfields as well.” Martins came to Johannesburg on May 17, 1887. At first he preached from a “cane stall”. On August 14, 1887 the congregation opened with the first church there made from wood and corrugated galvanised iron. At first there in a temporary capacity, Martins was proclaimed local pastor on November 21 and officially invested as such in May 1888. The 1952 retrospective Ons gemeentelike feesalbum writes the following: The congregation never, in fact, had the chance to grow peacefully. More than the pastor of any other congregation, Rev. Martins had to contend with every struggle the people and Church endured over the past three-quarters of a century, and he was constantly exposed to the dangers posed by the instability of a fast-growing, cosmopolitan community. Case in point, only three years after the 1887 construction of the first church, a larger one on the same Von Brandis Square was needed. Von Brandis Square was initially known as Church Square after the construction of the first building. Later, around 1997, it was renamed Government Square after the government bought the second church, subsequently renamed again in honor of Carl von Brandis, first magistrate of Johannesburg. Farmers and prospectors camped on the rest of the square, which later became home to the city’s first synagogue. Opposite the NGK church laid a row of stores, including the Hunt brothers’ bicycle shop, now the Williams Hunt & Co. bicycle shop. The mining camp’s first school was also alongside the church. The church served many purposes over its lifetime, including as a bakery, a lecture hall, an election polling place, and the office of the Rand Aids Association. Johannesburgers protested the government’s decision to raze the buildings and replace them with a courthouse, which nevertheless took place in 1909. The South Gauteng High Court continues to operate today where the NGK’s first church in Johannesburg once stood. The second church ceased to be the center of the congregation once the Johannesburg East Reformed Church (NGK) and the Jeppestown Reformed Church seceded on July 8, 1897, whence a temporary church, once again a wood and corrugated galvanised iron structure, was built on Jorissen Street in Braamfontein. The Second Boer War delayed construction of a more permanent church, the fourth and penultimate, which opened on April 13, 1904. Ons gemeente feesalbum reported in 1952 that “this building is due to be demolished soon so that the congregation can open the fifth church in its short history in 1953. So is Johannesburg!” The demolition of the fourth church in the 1950s left the brick Jeppestown church as the oldest NGK church still standing in the city. The Rev. Martins served the congregation until his retirement in 1920. By 1952, there were already 25 congregations derived from the mother church, a number that reached a high of 47 in 1973 spun off in some way from Johannesburg and organized into five sub-synods or Rings (Johannesburg, Langlaagte, Turffontein, Linden, and Melville). By 2010, these had shrunk to just 21 with the absorption or merger of, by date of original secession, the Langlaagte (1892), Fordsburg (1896), Jeppestown (1897), Johannesburg East (1897), Turffontein (originally La Rochelle, 1906), Cottesloe (earlier Vrededorp, 1927), Rosettenville (1938), Brixton (1939), Malvern (1940), Johannesburg North (1942), Bezuidenhout Valley (1944), Johannesburg West (1944), Parkhurst (1944), Crosby West (originally Hurst Hill, 1949), South Rand (1950), Johannesburg South (1950), Belgravia (1952), Mayfair (1953), Auckland Park (1958), Northeast Rand (1959), Sterrewag (1964), and Andrew Murray (1966). These had been merged into Deo Gloria, Parkkruin (formerly Parksig and first absorbing Parkhurst), Vergesig, Kensington, and a reformed Johannesburg North-Andrew Murray, along with the one completely new congregation active today, Weltevreden. Ons gemeente feesalbum continues: “the 1886 mining camp became the largest city in South Africa, where roaring crowds jostle every day between tall buildings on crowded streets that cannot handle all the traffic, but high among the cliff-like apartment and office buildings stands the Johannesburg, as if to say, ‘Man – he is like grass, but the Word of God is eternal.’” == The Rev. and Mrs. Coetzee’s arrival == On Friday, February 10, 1934, a motorcade of sixteen met the Rev. and Mrs. P.S.Z. Coetzee in Baragwanath on the highway from Potchefstroom. After singing Psalm 146:1 and an exchange of warm handshakes among attendees, the procession continued on to the parsonage, where several congregation members serenaded him with the hymn "Dat 's Heren zegen op u daal" (“The Lord’s blessing be upon you,” from Psalm 134:3). That night, around 600 occupied Eendrag Hall. Among the guests of honor who accompanied the new pastor and his wife from Free State were his mother as well as his father-in-law, Rev. Jacob Rabie of the Zastron Reformed Church (NGK). The function served both to welcome the new pastor’s family and to say goodbye to Rev. Roode, who had served the congregation during the preceding vacancy. Several speeches were given by visiting pastors, and for the Saturday evening solemn investiture itself, no less than seventeen ministers and missionaries wished the new pastor the Lord’s blessing with a warm handshake. Among them were the consulent, Rev. S.W. van Niekerk from Ringsweë, Rev. D.P. Cillié formerly of Johannesburg but now of Harrismith, and Rev. T.C. Esterhuizen, who managed the missionary program among the Cape Coloureds. The Rev. Coetzee’s inaugural Sunday morning sermon drew from the Apostles, namely the passage “for I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and him crucified” from 1 Corinthians 2:2. == Life in the booming congregation == The Rev. and Mrs. Coetzee’s labor as the pastoral couple yielded, in the words of the Rev. A.P. Smit, “unmistakable signs of a blessed flourishing in congregation life.” Attendance at services spiked to the point where another gallery needed to be added to the church building. Especially on Sunday evenings, pews could be hard to come by. The 1935 and 1936 Ring reports considered Johannesburg proper the top collections recipient there and reported worshiper satisfaction with both the sermons and the pastor’s visitations. The September 14, 1937 council meeting notes report on the “friendly cooperation between church council members” and the council’s high approval of the Rev. and Mrs. Coetzee’s work. At that same council meeting, just after the congregation’s 50th Anniversary Jubilee, brothers P.J. van Gass and H.J. Storm proposed a unanimously approved motion starting “that the church council with great pleasure and appreciation recognizes the great and divine work done [Rev. Coetzee] has done and wish he and his [second] wife the strength and grace to continue for a long time giving Him glory and uplifting our people.” A year later, in the August 1938 notes, the council thanked him once again “for his commitment to repairing the church and the lights [of the church],” in reference to renovations done that year. Herbert Evans was the contractor for the interior renovation, but Mr. F.P. Viljoen was hired by the council “to upgrade the church lights”; the funds came from a donation to the council by the late Dr. F.P. Fouche “in memory of the late Mrs. Fouche.” The acoustics, despite several past improvements, still left much to be desired however. == Debt paid off == Surging collections not only paid off the debt entirely but also kept the congregation consistently solvent. In the late 1930s, the Great Depression began to ease, and Rev. Coetzee took steps to boost revenue by replacing old mail fundraising with annual Thanksgiving mailing lists, though monthly donations were still expected. Ward sales were upgraded to large central ones for the whole congregations as well. Already in February 1935, a year into Rev. Coetzee’s tenure, the financial committee revealed the clearing of congregation debt – a longtime goal of Rev. Cillié. That May, the council notes carried word from the Sisters’ Circle that “since the Sister’s Circle was founded to resolve the congregation’s financial problems and the church council has confirmed the full payment of debts, its members declare it dissolved,” to which the council thanked them for their work “in dark days” of the early Depression years. == Publication of the Afrikaans Bible == Although the four NGK Synods proclaimed Afrikaans the official church language in 1919, and the Transvaal Synod followed the example of the Free State one in approving Afrikaans Bible translation that May, it took 14 years for a full rendering to be published. On May 29, 1933, the first edition of 10,000 Afrikaans Bibles arrived at Cape Town on the MV Carnarvon Castle. Ceremonies were held to welcome copies throughout the country. For example, the Transvaal Teachers’ Association invited “a large number of members, pastors, and other dignitaries to welcome the arrival of the Afrikaans Bible” at Rusoord School in Johannesburg. On Sunday, August 27, of the same year, NGK and Reformed Churches of South Africa (GKSA) congregations throughout South Africa held “Bible Festivals” to celebrate the tomes arriving. A large central one was held in Johannesburg, run by a committee of two representatives during the vacancy between Rev. Cillié’s death and Rev. Coetzee’s arrival. Henceforward, all preaching from the Braamfontein pulpit would be in Afrikaans. == The congregation monthly == A highlight of Rev. Coetzee’s time was the foundation of the congregation’s own monthly newsletter. 30 years before Rev. Coetzee’s time, Rev. Martins had started the Witwatersrand Kerk- en Skoolblad, but this was more of a Ring paper active from 1905 to 1906. In January 1923, Rev. William Nicol of Johannesburg East started a popular newsletter in his congregation, the Irenenuus, leading Rev. Cillié to suggest “writing a leaflet to be published monthly for the congregation to read” at the March 1931 meeting. Perhaps due to the pastor’s subsequent illness, this suggestion was never implemented, but Rev. Coetzee took up the issue upon arrival. In December 1934, the council decided to begin publication, and so Rev. Coetzee began editing and publishing Die Fakkel with its first edition in March 1935, assisted by two teachers from the Helmpekaar Kollege. According to council minutes at the time, it was first printed by a J.C. Fick and later by the publishers of Die Vaderland. The paper was active for two and a half years, releasing its last edition in August 1937. The council opted to suspend publication then and instead order 750 copies a month of the new monthly of the Transvaal Synod, which appeared regularly under the title of Die Voorligter (later LIG) that December, as per the June 1937 council meeting notes. == The 50th Anniversary Celebration == In September 1936, elder J. Joubert reminded the council of its pending semi-centennial year, upon which Rev. Coetzee founded and chaired a celebration commission including Joubert, W.P. Jacobs, C.D. Wentzel, J.A. Muller, P.J. van Gass, J.H. Nel, and T.A. Hugo, later joined by Rev. T.C. Esterhuizen. By the beginning of August 1937, Rev. Coetzee reported to the council on behalf of the committee: That the 50th anniversary celebration of the congregation is hereby scheduled for August 28–29; the main service will be led by the local pastor and soon an invitation will be issued in the Kerkbode to former congregation members. A smaller committee of Revs. Coetzee and Esterhuizen and Mr. Van Heerden of Die Vaderland has been tasked with writing up short pamphlets on the congregation, including a portrait of the serving council, to be issued to attendees and published in Die Vaderland to advertise the occasion. The proceedings began on the evening of Wednesday, August 25, with Rev. Coetzee’s opening sermon, and several visiting pastors spoke that weekend. The 15-page pamphlet summarizing the congregation’s history was entitled Vyftigjarige Fees van die Braamfonteinse Gemeente (“Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration of the Braamfontein Congregation”), preceded by an August 24 article in Die Vaderland. The congregation then included 2,500 people, of whom 1,580 were confirmed members. Forty teachers taught 500 children in the five Sunday schools. The church council had expanded to 33. Rev. Smit writes: This congregation grew remarkably since its foundation half a century ago. Not to say the NGK on the Rand in general has not also grown over the same time. In 1887, several hundred worshipers formed the only congregation of our church on the Rand. Fifty years later, there were no less than twenty-two congregations stretching from Springs to Randfontein, including 62,000 members! [From 1937-1947] our Church on the Rand would continue to advance in various ways. === Curates in Johannesburg === The Rev. Coetzee saw the need for curates to help minister to the burgeoning congregation as soon as he arrived, and the council thus hired a proponent named Botha in August 1935 to serve as such. He left that November, however, and in August 1936, Rev. Coetzee implored them to try again in the knowledge, as per the council meeting notes that month, “that his work for the congregation was suffering for being spread too thin.” The council’s next proponent, Martin Kruger, was ordained as permanent curate at the end of 1937. After almost two years serving the congregation, Kruger married and left for the Westdene Reformed Church at the end of June 1938, going on to serve the Graaff-Reinet Reformed Church (NGK), Linden Reformed Church (NGK), and Ontdekkers Reformed Church (NGK). == First student pastor == After the departure of Rev. Gert Meij (1939-1940), the council postponed searching for another co-pastor. The April 1940 Transvaal Synod Conference, however, began an effort to hire two student pastors for the area, one for Pretoria and Heidelberg and the other for Johannesburg and Potchefstroom, both of whom would be dignified as full co-pastors of the congregations concentrating on ministry to students. The council first interviewed Rev. Ben Marais on the Transvaal staff, but he opted to serve at Pretoria East, leading the council to hire the young pastor of Vrededorp (later Cottesloe), the Rev. Johan Bezuidenhoud, as co-pastor for students in Johannesburg and Potchefstroom. The Rev. Coetzee invested Rev. Bezuidenhoud on Saturday, March 15, 1941 in the Braamfontein church, as Rev. G.D. Worst of the Potchefstroom Reformed Church (NGK) gave the investiture speech. In May 1943, Rev. Bezuidenhoud moved on to the Steynsburg Reformed Church (NGK). == The Rev. Coetzee leaves for Edenburg == After eleven years serving Johannesburg, Rev. Coetzee returned to work in his hometown congregation, the Edenburg Reformed Church. His health could no longer handle the urban demands, prompting the change to lighten his workload. The Reverend and his wife were bid farewell at a warm ceremony in the Selborne hall on April 5, 1945. == Diamond jubilee == The congregation celebrated its 60th anniversary during the last weekend of September 1947 with a wreath-laying at the graves of Revs. Martins (who had died September 14, 1938) and Cillié (died October 30, 1935). The Rev. Martins’ widow also attended, and would die soon after in July 1948, at her home on Richmond Avenue, Auckland Park. By the year of the jubilee, the congregation numbered 4,000 including 2,830 confirmed members served by three full-time pastors, 83 council members, 48 deacons, and 32 teachers serving 350 students in three Sunday schools. == Two marriages and a divorce == Post-apartheid migration after 1990 drained the Afrikaner population from downtown and surrounding neighborhoods (some of which had long been deemed multiracial “grey areas”). The congregation thus shrunk to 110 in 1994, leading to a merger with the Auckland Park congregation on Thursday, June 1, 1995, after which both the latter’s church on 71 Richmond Avenue and the mother church on 117 De Korte Street in Braamfontein continued to be used for services. That August, plans were already laid to merge with Johannesburg East (whose church in Doornfontein was known as the Irene Church), which came to fruition on Sunday, June 1, 1997 as an expanded Johannesburg congregation stretching from Auckland Park to Braamfontein, Berea, and Hillbrow. The headquarters was moved to Auckland Park, with services continuing to be held in Braamfontein and the Irene Church. The resulting congregation had four pastors: Rev. Johan Krige (student pastor of Auckland Park since January 8, 1982, later CEO of MES), Rev. Christoph Müller (suburbs), and Revs. Attie Botha and Piet Smith (downtown). The congregation stretched from Ellis Park in the east to Rand Afrikaans University (now the University of Johannesburg) in the west, and Revs. Botha and Smith ministered to many non-members downtown. Although the Melville Reformed Church approached Auckland Park about mergers (Melville’s membership was just 340 in 1994), Melville and the Braamfontein/Irene portions of the district did not come to an agreement. The constituent parts of the Johannesburg congregation split when, around 2000, the Auckland Park church sold the Kingway buildings to a gas station developer, leading the area to split to join Melville as the Melville Cross Reformed Church, worshiping from the Melville church on 51 4th Avenue. == Historiography == Over the years, several books and other publications have been written about the history of the congregation. The first was the 20th anniversary publication from 1907 known as Ned. Herv. of Geref. Gemeente Johannesburg, Twintig Jarigfeest, 14 Aug. 1887 – 14 Aug. 1907. Eene beknopte geschiedenis van deze Gemeente onder Gods trouwe leiding gedurende den tijd van 20 jaren (“NGK Johannesburg Congregation, Twentieth Anniversary, August 14, 1887 – August 14, 1907: A brief history of this Church under God’s faithful guidance during a period of 20 years.”) The 12-page pamphlet (with two columns a page) is in the church archives in Pretoria and celebrates the congregation’s recovery after the Second Boer War. 30 years later came the 15-page, again double-columned Brosjure ter herdenking van die 50-jarige bestaan van die Ned. Herv. of Geref. Gemeente Braamfontein (“Brochure in honor of the 50 years of the Braamfontein NGK Congregation”). The 508-page Ons kerk in due Goudstad (1887-1947) by Rev. Smit was written in conjunction with the church councils of Johannesburg, Fordsburg, Johannesburg East, and Jeppestown in 1948 to celebrate the denomination’s 60th anniversary in town. Finally, Rev. Bezuidenhout’s festival committee published a 31-page festival brochure in 1962 for the 75th anniversary. == Location == The church was located on 117 De Korte Street in Braamfontein, next to the old Highveld Synod headquarters. == Select pastors == Johannes Nieuwoudt Martins, 1887–1920 (arrived May 17, 1887, became pastor on November 25, 1887, ordained in May 1888, retired in 1920, his only congregation). Herman Christian Johannes Becker, 1890 (curate) Willem Siebert Edward Rörich, 1894–1897 (Kompounds) Pieter Gerhardus Jacobus Meiring, 1895–1897 (later first pastor of Johannesburg East) David Petrus Cillié, 1920–1926 and 1929–1933 Dr. Franciscus Dionysius (Dio) Moorrees, August 1927 – 1928 (barely 10 months) Petrus Stefanus Zacharius Coetzee, 1934–1945 Harold Christian Botha, 1936–1942 (curate) Gert Olivier Meij, 1939–1940 Johan Gregorius Bezuidenhoud, 1941–1943 Jacob Stolp Louw, 1944–1949 (originally student pastor but co-pastor from the end of 1946 on) Cornelis Bertie Brink, 1945–1959, actuary and later moderator of the Transvaal Synod of 1951–1957 David Stefanus Snyman, 1947–1953 (third co-pastor assigned to RAU students) Johannes Alexander van Wyk, 1950–1952 (student pastor) Cornelis Johannes Hattingh, 1954–1955 Johan Andries Lombard, 1955–1961 Marthinus Eduard Johannes Bezuidenhout, 1960–1962 Adriaan Cornelis Barnard, 1961–1967 Dr. Willie Jonker, 1962–1965 A.J. Venter, omstreeks 1963 Dr. John Henry Roberts, 1966–1970 (professor of New Testatment studies at UNISA) Marthinus Theunis Steyn Fourie, July 26, 1969 – 1973 Talbot Horatio Nelson Sadler, 1969–1975 Gerhardus Willem Painter, April 17, 1970 – September 5, 1993 (retirement) Neille van Aswegen, 1973–1976 Michiel Christoffel Roux, 1980–1984 Congregation vacant from 1993 until the merger with Auckland Park in 1995. Christoph Thomas Müller, 1995–2004 (earlier with Auckland Park, left in 2004 for Groenkloof, Pretoria) Pieter (Piet) Ernst Scholtz Smith, 1995–2008 (earlier with Auckland Park, continued with Melville) Johan Stefanus Krige, 1995–2000 (came from Auckland Park, continues as CEO of MES) Arthur Daniel (Attie) Botha, 1997–2001
[ "Heidelberg, Gauteng", "Psalm 134", "Sunday school", "Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK)", "Randfontein", "Cape Town", "Groenkloof", "Book of Genesis", "Orange Grove, Gauteng", "Great Depression", "MV Carnarvon Castle", "Afrikaans language", "Rand Afrikaans University", "Harrismith", "Parkhurst Reformed Church", "Berea, Gauteng", "Auckland Park", "Jeppestown", "Turffontein Reformed Church", "Brixton Reformed Church", "Westdene, Gauteng", "Carl von Brandis", "Fordsburg Reformed Church", "bakery", "Bible", "Johannesburg East Reformed Church (NGK)", "Observatory, Gauteng", "wood", "Potchefstroom Reformed Church (NGK)", "First Epistle to the Corinthians", "Langlaagte Reformed Church", "Fordsburg", "curate", "Braamfontein", "University of South Africa", "Parktown", "Northcliff", "Afrikaner", "Potchefstroom", "corrugated galvanised iron", "Doornfontein", "Melville, Gauteng", "Witwatersrand", "Springs, Gauteng", "Linden, Gauteng", "Cape Coloureds", "LIG", "Vrededorp, Gauteng", "Randburg", "Second Boer War", "Johannesburg", "Highveld", "South African Republic", "Transvaal Province", "Cape Colony", "willow", "Houghton Estate", "apartheid", "Free State (province)", "Hillbrow", "University of Johannesburg", "Johannesburg North Reformed Church (NGK)", "Psalm 146", "Stephanus Jacobus du Toit", "William Nicol (Transvaal)", "Linden Reformed Church (NGK)", "Pretoria" ]
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Ramnagar, Diamond Harbour
{{Infobox settlement | name = Ramnagar | 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 II | established_title = | established_date = | founder = | named_for = | government_type = | governing_body = | unit_pref = Metric | area_footnotes = | area_rank = | area_total_km2 = 1.83 | elevation_footnotes = | elevation_m = 8 | population_total = 4655 | 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=== Ramnagar is located at . ==Demographics== According to the 2011 Census of India, Ramnagar had a total population of 4,655, of which 2,410 (52%) were males and 2,245 (48%) were females. There were 502 persons in the age range of 0–6 years. The total number of literate persons in Ramnagar was 3,215 (77.41% of the population over 6 years). ==Civic administration== ===Police station=== Ramnagar police station has jurisdiction over parts of the Diamond Harbour II CD block. ==Transport== Ramnagar is on the Falta SEZ Road. ==Healthcare== Sarisha Block Primary Health Centre at Sarisha, with 15 beds, is the major government medical facility in the Diamond Harbour II 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", "States and territories of India", "Bhushna", "Punya, Falta", "Bengali language", "West Bengal", "Raichak", "List of Regional Transport Office districts in India", "Baneshwarpur", "Fatepur, Falta", "Community development block in India", "census town", "2011 Census of India", "Sarisha", "Diamond Harbour (Vidhan Sabha constituency)", "India", "Indian Standard Time", "Hooghly River", "Dhola, Diamond Harbour", "Deulpota", "Falta, South 24 Parganas", "English language", "Diamond Harbour (Lok Sabha constituency)", "Hasimnagar", "Ganges Delta", "Parulia, Diamond Harbour", "Diamond Harbour II", "Masat, Diamond Harbour", "Chandpala Anantapathpur" ]
62,109,170
Category:Liberal arts colleges in Vermont
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Prunus dictyoneura
Prunus dictyoneura () is a species of bush cherry found in Gansu, Hebei, Henan, Jiangsu, Ningxia, Shaanxi and Shanxi provinces of China. A shrub 0.3 to 1.0 (occasionally 2.0)m tall, it prefers to grow in thickets in grasslands on hillsides from 400 to 1600 (occasionally 2,300)m above sea level. Chloroplast DNA sequencing has shown that its closest relative is Prunus humilis, at least as far as chloroplasts are concerned. __TOC__ ==Description== P. dictyoneura are shrubs at most 2m tall. The bark of branchlets is brownish gray, and young branchlets are pubescent. Winter buds are ovoid and densely downy. The stipules are linear, 3 to 4mm long, with margins gland-tipped and serrate. Petioles are 2 to 3 mm long and densely pubescent. P. dictyoneura leaf blades are obovate-elliptic, and 1.0 to 2.5cm wide by 2 to 4cm long. They have cuneate bases, serrate or biserrate margins, and rounded to acute apices, with 5 to 8 secondary veins on either side of the midvein, with conspicuous reticulate veins. The abaxial surface of the leaves are pale green and densely brown hirsute, and the adaxial surface of the leaves is dark green and glabrous or pubescent, and usually crisp. Inflorescences are one-flowered to three-flowered, and held in a fascicle. Pedicels are 4 to 8cm and densely pubescent. The hypanthia are campanulate, 3 by 3mm and externally pubescent. The sepals are ovate, 3mm long, with acute apices. Petals are white to pink, and obovate. There are 30 to 35 stamens per flower. The styles are almost as long as the stamens. The fruit, a drupe, is red when ripe, and globose. Flowers open before the leaves, in April through May, and fruits set in July through September, depending on local temperatures. ==Uses== It is occasionally cultivated for medicinal purposes.
[ "Chloroplast DNA", "Prunus humilis", "Ludwig Diels", "bush cherry" ]
62,109,204
Aleksander Cybulski
Aleksander Cybulski (born 30 July 1962) is a Polish former professional footballer who has had a playing career that lasted over 40 years since his debut in 1980. His career highlights include six seasons in the I liga making 131 appearances in the Polish top division with Bałtyk Gdynia and Lechia Gdańsk. Other than short spells in Sweden and Belgium, his entire playing career in Poland has been with clubs in the Pomeranian region of Poland. He has played for 10 different Pomeranian football teams and is known to have made over 100 appearances for Bałtyk Gdynia and over 200 appearances for Lechia Gdańsk. In the later years of his career, and despite still playing regularly, he held coaching roles with three clubs in the lower Polish leagues between 2009 and 2019, most recently being the head coach of Sztorm Mosty. ==Career== ===Playing career=== Cybulski started his career with in the youth levels of his local team Bałtyk Gdynia, making his debut against Lechia Gdańsk on 24 March 1980. In his first season with Bałtyk he played 5 times as the team won promotion to the I liga. In his first spell with Bałtyk he made 39 appearances scoring two goals. Cybulski then spent a season with Stoczniowiec Gdańsk before joining Lechia Gdańsk the season after. His debut for Lechia came in the Polish Super Cup which the team won by beating Lech Poznań 1–0. That season Cybulski also made 26 appearances scoring two goals as Lechia won the II liga, and played in Lechia's first ever European game in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup against Juventus. The next four seasons Lechia played in the top division of Poland, with Cybulski making a total of 97 appearances in the I liga. Lechia were relegated at the end of the 1987–88 season to the II liga, with Cybulski leaving the club two seasons later. In his first spell with Lechia he played a total 176 league appearances for Lechia contributing 9 goals for the team. He then spent two seasons in Sweden with Hudiksvalls FF returning to Lechia Gdańsk for a season in 1992 making a further 18 league appearances. In total for Lechia Gdańsk Cybulski made 211 appearances and scored 9 goals. He then had a season in Belgium with CS Jemappes, returning to Poland the season after joining Pomezania Malbork. He played with Pomezania in the 1994–95 season with the club finishing 9th in the II liga, the club's highest ever league finish. After that historic season for Pomezania he returned to Bałtyk Gdynia, making a further 103 appearances over the next 5 seasons with Bałtyk, with a short 6-month spell at Wierzyca Starogard Gdański in the middle of that 5 season spell. In total at Bałtyk Gdynia he made 142 league appearances scoring 9 times for the club. Spójnia Sadlinki, and GKS Kowale. After an 18-month period with GKS Kowale which was interrupted due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Cybulski returned to Spójnia Sadlinki with whom he played for before playing with GKS Kowale. ===Coaching career=== From 2009 until 2015 Cybulski was the head coach of KS Chwaszczyno taking the club from the sixth tier to the fourth tier. For the 2015–16 season he was in charge of Cartusia Kartuzy, being dismissed from his contract at the end of the season. In 2017 he became the manager of Sztorm Mosty. ==Stats== ==Honours== Bałtyk Gdynia II liga: 1979–80 Lechia Gdańsk II liga: 1983–84 Polish Super Cup: 1983
[ "Belgium", "Defender (association football)", "I liga", "Lech Poznań", "SKS Stoczniowiec Gdańsk", "Ekstraklasa", "UEFA Cup Winners' Cup", "Lechia Gdańsk", "Midfielder (association football)", "Polish Super Cup", "Pomeranian Voivodeship", "Juventus F.C.", "Association football", "Bałtyk Gdynia", "Sweden", "Hudiksvalls FF", "Pomezania Malbork", "Cartusia Kartuzy", "Gdynia" ]
62,109,206
Category:Pomezania Malbork players
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62,109,209
Category:Cartusia Kartuzy players
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62,109,211
Adriano Moraes (fighter)
{{Infobox martial artist | name = Adriano Moraes | other_names = MikinhoBlack Diamond | image = | alt = | caption = | birth_name =Adriano da Silva Moraes | birth_date = | birth_place = Brasília, Federal District, Brazil | death_place = | death_cause = | residence = | nationality = | height = | weight_lb = 135 | weight_class = Flyweight (2011–present)Bantamweight (2013, 2018) | reach = | style = Brazilian Jiu Jitsu | stance = | fighting_out_of = Coconut Creek, Florida, U.S. | team = Constrictor Team American Top Team (2016–present) | rank = Black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (born April 21, 1988) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist who competes in the Flyweight division of ONE Championship. He is a former three-time ONE FC Flyweight World Champion. He is currently ranked #1 in the ONE Championship Flyweight rankings. ==Background== Moraes was born in Brasilia, Brazil and abandoned by his mother days after birth. He was taken to an orphanage where he lived for three years before being adopted. He was an active child who partook in judo and capoeira. Wanting to learn how to better defend himself, Moraes took up Brazilian jiu-jitsu. As a member of Constrictor Team, Moraes shined as a submission specialist. Moraes developed his skills and competed in jiu-jitsu tournaments before transitioning into MMA. He made his MMA debut in 2011. He would win the NAGA No-Gi Pro Division Championship in 2014 prior to earning his black belt. ==Mixed martial arts career== On September 4, 2011, Moraes made his professional mixed martial arts debut at Precol Combat 5 against Ismael Bonfim. Moraes won by first-round submission (guillotine choke). He would reel off six more victories before joining the longtime promotion Shooto in 2013. ===ONE Championship=== On November 15, 2013, Moraes made his ONE Championship debut at ONE FC: Warrior Spirit. He lost a split decision to Yusup Saadulaev. ====First title reign==== After back-to-back wins, Moraes met Geje Eustaquio for the vacant ONE Flyweight Championship. Moraes would capture his first world championship with a second-round guillotine choke on September 12, 2014 at ONE FC: Age of Champions. Moraes would successfully defend the belt against Riku Shibuya on March 13, 2015 before dropping the title in a close split decision to Kairat Akhmetov on November 21, 2015 at ONE: Dynasty of Champions. ====Second title reign==== On August 13, 2016, Moraes captured gold once again as he became the interim ONE flyweight champion by defeating Tilek Batyrov via rear-naked choke at ONE: Heroes of the World. On August 5, 2017, Moraes and Akhmetov fought in a flyweight unification bout. Moraes won the fight by unanimous decision and became the ONE flyweight championship undisputed champion. On November 10, 2017, Moraes successfully defended the title against Danny Kingad at ONE: Legends of the World by rear-naked choke in the first round. Moraes was scheduled to defend his title against Reece McLaren at ONE Championship: Visions of Victory on March 9, 2018. However, he suffered a knee injury and was forced to withdraw. Moraes was set to make his second title defense against Geje Eustaquio at ONE Championship: Pinnacle of Power on June 23, 2018. He lost the fight and the title via split decision. ====Third title reign==== The pair met in a trilogy match at ONE Championship: Hero's Ascent on January 25, 2019. Moraes re-captured the championship via unanimous decision. As the first bout of his new four-fight, two-year contract, Adriano Moraes was scheduled to defend his title against ONE Flyweight World Grand Prix Champion and former UFC Flyweight Champion Demetrious Johnson at ONE Championship: Reign of Dynasties on April 11, 2020. The fight was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. After being delayed, Moraes defended his title against Johnson at ONE on TNT 1 on April 7, 2021. The event was held at the Singapore Indoor Stadium in Kallang, Singapore and will be broadcast on TNT during US prime time. Moraes won the bout via KO in round two. Moraes next defended his title against Yuya Wakamatsu at ONE: X on March 6, 2022. He won the fight via a guillotine choke submission in the third round. Moraes made the third title defense of his third title reign against Demetrious Johnson at ONE on Prime Video 1 on August 27, 2022. He lost the bout via KO due to a flying knee in the fourth round. The trilogy bout between Moraes and Johnson for the ONE Flyweight World Championship was held on May 5, 2023, at ONE Fight Night 10. Moraes lost the bout by unanimous decision. Moraes faced Danny Kingad in a rematch on November 9, 2024, at ONE 169. He won the fight via guillotine choke in round two. Moraes faced Yuya Wakamatsu in a rematch, for the vacant ONE Flyweight World Championship on March 23, 2025, at ONE 172. He lost the fight via technical knockout in round one. ==Coaches== Head coach: Marcus "Conan" Silveira MMA: Mike Brown Striking: Thiago Alves Wrestling: Steve Mocco Head Strength & Conditioning: Everton Strength & Conditioning/Nutrition: Lucas e Layla ==Championships and accomplishments== ONE Championship ONE Flyweight Championship (Three times) Four successful title defenses (overall) One successful title defense (first reign) One successful title defense (second reign) Two successful title defense (third reign) Interim ONE Flyweight Championship (One time) MMA Knockout of the Year 2021 Shooto Shooto Brazil Flyweight Championship World MMA Awards 2021 Upset of the Year vs. Demetrious Johnson at ONE on TNT 1 ==Mixed martial arts record== |- |Loss |align=center|21-6 |Yuya Wakamatsu |TKO (punches) |ONE 172 | |align=center|1 |align=center|3:39 |Saitama, Japan | |- |Win |align=center|21–5 |Danny Kingad |Submission (guillotine choke) |ONE 169 | |align=center|2 |align=center|4:14 |Bangkok, Thailand | |- |Loss |align=center|20–5 |Demetrious Johnson |Decision (unanimous) |ONE Fight Night 10 | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Broomfield, Colorado, United States | |- |Loss |align=center|20–4 |Demetrious Johnson |KO (flying knee) |ONE on Prime Video 1 | |align=center|4 |align=center|3:50 |Kallang, Singapore | |- |Win |align=center|20–3 |Yuya Wakamatsu |Submission (guillotine choke) |ONE: X | |align=center|3 |align=center|3:58 |Kallang, Singapore | |- |Win |align=center|19–3 |Demetrious Johnson |KO (knee) |ONE on TNT 1 | |align=center|2 |align=center|2:24 |Kallang, Singapore | |- |Win |align=center|18–3 |Geje Eustaquio |Decision (unanimous) |ONE: Hero's Ascent | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Pasay, Philippines | |- |Loss |align=center|17–3 |Geje Eustaquio |Decision (split) |ONE: Pinnacle of Power | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Macau, SAR, China | |- |Win |align=center|17–2 |Danny Kingad |Submission (rear naked choke) |ONE: Legends of the World | |align=center|1 |align=center|4:45 |Pasay, Philippines | |- |Win |align=center|16–2 |Kairat Akhmetov | Decision (unanimous) |ONE: Kings & Conquerors | |align=center| 5 |align=center| 5:00 |Macau, SAR, China | |- |Win |align=center|15–2 |Tilek Batyrov |Submission (rear-naked choke) |ONE: Heroes of the World | |align=center|2 |align=center|4:49 |Macau, SAR, China | |- |Win |align=center|14–2 |Eugene Toquero |Submission (brabo choke) |ONE: Union of Warriors | |align=center|1 |align=center|4:53 |Yangon, Myanmar | |- |Loss |align=center|13–2 |Kairat Akhmetov |Decision (split) |ONE: Dynasty of Champions 4 | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Beijing, China | |- |Win |align=center|13–1 |Riku Shibuya |Decision (unanimous) |ONE: Age of Champions | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | |- |Win |align=center|12–1 |Geje Eustaquio |Submission (guillotine choke) |ONE FC: Rise of the Kingdom | |align=center|2 |align=center|3:45 |Phnom Penh, Cambodia | |- |Win |align=center|11–1 |Kosuke Suzuki |Submission (arm-triangle choke) |ONE FC: Era of Champions | |align=center|3 |align=center|1:35 |Jakarta, Indonesia | |- |Win |align=center|10–1 |Yasuhiro Urushitani |Submission (rear-naked choke) |ONE FC: War of Nations | |align=center|2 |align=center|3:48 |Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | |- |Loss |align=center|9–1 |Yusup Saadulaev |Decision (split) |ONE FC: Warrior Spirit | |align=center|5 |align=center|5:00 |Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | |- |Win |align=center|9–0 |Dileno Lopes |TKO (body kick) |Shooto Brazil 40 | |align=center|3 |align=center|1:00 |Manaus, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|8–0 |José Marcos Júnior |Decision (unanimous) |Shooto Brazil 39 | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |Brasília, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|7–0 |Carlos Sousa Almeida |Submission (rear-naked choke) |Octagon Rounds Fight 2 | |align=center|2 |align=center|2:20 |Palmas, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|6–0 |Aldo Ariel Villalba |Submission (arm-triangle choke) |Pro Mix Fight 7 | |align=center|1 |align=center|1:30 |Campo Grande, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|5–0 |Michael William Costa |Decision (unanimous) |Shooto Brazil 34 | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |Brasília, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|4–0 |Leonardo Moura |Decision (unanimous) |Encontro Fight 2 | |align=center|3 |align=center|5:00 |São Paulo, Brazil | |- |win |align=center|3–0 |Jhon Leno |KO (knee) |Rockstrike MMA | |align=center|1 |align=center|N/A |Brasília, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|2–0 |James Carvalho |TKO (elbows) |Precol Combat 7 | |align=center|1 |align=center|1:55 |Unaí, Brazil | |- |Win |align=center|1–0 |Ismael Bonfim |Submission (guillotine choke) |Precol Combat 5 | |align=center|1 |align=center|2:55 |Unaí, Brazil | |-
[ "Campo Grande", "List of ONE Championship champions", "2018 in ONE Championship", "Kuala Lumpur", "Jakarta", "ONE 172", "Yuya Wakamatsu", "judo", "ONE Championship Rankings", "Brazilian jiu-jitsu", "2013 in ONE Championship", "Steve Mocco", "Manaus", "COVID-19 pandemic", "Kairat Akhmetov", "Brazilian Jiu Jitsu", "TNT (American TV network)", "Saitama (city)", "Demetrious Johnson", "Coconut Creek, Florida", "Singapore", "Mixed martial arts", "Unaí", "2015 in ONE Championship", "North American Grappling Association", "Yangon", "ONE Championship", "Flyweight (MMA)", "2014 in ONE Championship", "Kallang", "Bantamweight (MMA)", "Brasília", "ONE on Prime Video 1", "MMAjunkie.com", "Marcus \"Conan\" Silveira", "World MMA Awards", "Pasay", "2017 in ONE Championship", "Macau", "List of UFC champions", "Singapore Indoor Stadium", "Shooto", "prime time", "capoeira", "Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu", "Phnom Penh", "List of current mixed martial arts champions", "2016 in ONE Championship", "Palmas, Paraná", "ONE: X", "List of current ONE fighters", "Danny Kingad", "2020 in ONE Championship", "Mike Brown (fighter)", "List of male mixed martial artists", "2019 in ONE Championship", "American Top Team", "ONE 169", "Bangkok", "ONE Flyweight World Championship", "Yasuhiro Urushitani", "São Paulo", "Broomfield, Colorado", "2021 in ONE Championship", "Beijing", "ONE Fight Night 10", "Special administrative regions of China", "Thiago Alves (fighter)", "ONE Flyweight Championship (135 lb)" ]
62,109,212
Category:Wikipedians affiliated with Wikimedia Bangladesh
These users are members of, or otherwise affiliated with, Wikimedia Bangladesh.
[ "Wikimedia Bangladesh" ]
62,109,219
Category:Christian radio stations in the United States by state
[]
62,109,225
Callicrates of Samos
Callicrates or Kallikrates (), was a fleet commander (nauarchos) of the Ptolemaic navy, who served under Ptolemy II Philadelphus during the Second Syrian War from 270 to 250 BC. ==Career== Callicrates originated from Samos. He arrived at the Ptolemaic court in Alexandria, Egypt and received the aulic rank of philos ("friend") of the sibling monarchs Ptolemy II and Arsinoë II, rising to high offices and dignities. In the fourteenth year of reign (272/271 BC) of the co monarchs, he officiated as a priest of Alexander and he was the first a priest of the "sibling Goddess Arsinoë". For a period of 20 years, between the years 270 to 250 BC he was appointed as fleet commander in the Ptolemaic navy, this has been attested on inscriptions on statues that have been found honouring him. He was commander of the Ptolemaic Aegean Fleet and was engaged in naval operations during the Second Syrian War (260–253 BC) where he suffered successive defeats against the allied forces of Antiochus II Theos of the Seleucid Empire and Antigonus II Gonatas of the Kingdom of Macedon. During the lifetime of Arsinoe II the sibling monarchs and Callicrates received a tribute from his home island of Samos. Around the year 257 BC he was instructed to build a temple to Isis and Anubis at Canopus on behalf of Ptolemy II. That same year, he instructed his agent Zoilos to write to the chief finance minister of Egypt, Apollonius in regard to his request to pay the navy tax, and to also remind Apollonius that both Oromachos and Deinon were liable for the same tax demand. Callicrates is also known for the erection of a temple on Cape Zephyrion near Alexandria, where Arsinoë II was worshipped as Aphrodite. This foundation is documented in a poem by Posidippus, and became one of the most important cult sites of Hellenistic Egypt. At Olympia, Greece he had constructed what must have been enormous statues of both King Ptolemy II and his sibling (sister wife) Queen Arsinoe II that stood on separate bases reportedly 24 meters wide. Callicrates himself was honoured by statues at Delos, Palai-Paphos and Kourion. As a "benefactor" of the city of Olous in Crete he received honorary citizenship (proxenia); he had probably been there on a diplomatic mission with about eight men about the time of the Chremonidean War. ==Footnotes==
[ "Cape Zephyrion", "Second Syrian War", "Ptolemaic Kingdom", "Aphrodite", "Arsinoe II", "Ptolemaic navy", "Canopus", "Admiral", "Kingdom of Macedon", "Anubis", "Ptolemaic Aegean Fleet", "Arsinoë II", "Delos", "Olympia, Greece", "Isis", "Antigonus II Gonatas", "Samos", "Seleucid Empire", "nauarchos", "Chremonidean War", "Apollonius (dioiketes)", "Ptolemy II Philadelphus", "Ptolemy II", "Antiochus II Theos", "Olous", "Sanctuary of Arsinoe Aphrodite at Cape Zephyrion", "Ptolemaic cult of Alexander the Great", "Posidippus (epigrammatic poet)", "proxenia", "aulic rank", "Alexandria, Egypt" ]
62,109,242
Le Neve
Le Neve is a Breton surname. Historically most prevalent in Morbihan . People with that name include: Clement le Neve Foster (1841–1904), English geologist and mineralogist Ethel Le Neve (1883–1967), mistress of the murderer Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen John Le Neve (1679–1741), English antiquary Mélissa Le Nevé (born 1989), French professional rock climber Oliver Le Neve (1662–1711), Norfolk country squire, landowning sportsman, and duellist Peter Le Neve (1661–1729), English herald and antiquary Peter le Neve Foster (1809–1879), English barrister and mathematician William Le Neve (1600? – 1661), English herald and genealogist
[ "Morbihan", "John Le Neve", "Oliver Le Neve", "Peter Le Neve", "William Le Neve", "Clement le Neve Foster", "Peter le Neve Foster", "Mélissa Le Nevé", "Ethel Le Neve", "Breton language" ]
62,109,251
Category:Films directed by Oz Perkins
[]
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Peter Lily
Peter Lily or Lilly (died 1615), archdeacon of Taunton, was son of Peter Lily, prebendary of Canterbury, and grandson of the grammarian William Lily. He was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, where he became fellow, and graduated B.A., M.A., and D.D. He took holy orders, and was made rector of Fulham, Middlesex on 17 May 1598, prebendary of St. Paul's on 16 April 1599, rector of Hornsey, Middlesex on 1 November 1610, and archdeacon of Taunton, Somerset in October 1613 (Le Neve, Fasti, i. 168). He was nominated by James I among the first fellows of Chelsea College, and is named in the charter of its foundation on 8 May 1610. Lily was also a brother of the Savoy Chapel, where he died in 1615. His will, dated 22 February 1614–15, was proved on 14 June 1615. He was buried in the chancel of the Savoy Chapel, where are also the tombstones of his wife (died 1 June 1627) and only daughter (died 10 October 1625). He published Conciones Duæ, London, 1619, and Two Sermons, London, 1619. [Lansd. MS. 983, f. 52; Wood's Athenæ (Bliss), i. 34; Newcourt's Repert. i. 128, 587, 609; Faulkner's Chelsea, ii. 225; Cat. of the Bodleian Library.]
[ "Hornsey", "Chelsea College (17th century)", "prebendary", "Jesus College, Cambridge", "Master of Arts", "St. Paul's", "Savoy Chapel", "Canterbury Cathedral", "holy orders", "John Le Neve", "Fulham, Middlesex", "Bachelor of Arts", "archdeacon of Taunton", "fellow", "James VI and I", "Lady Day", "Rector (ecclesiastical)", "D.D.", "William Lily (grammarian)" ]
62,109,265
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/forum.esocialdigital.com.au
== Links == forum.esocialdigital.com.au resolves to [//104.238.75.17 104.238.75.17] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 3 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,267
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/0points.com
== Links == 0points.com resolves to [//184.168.131.241 184.168.131.241] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == No users found. == Additions == No additions recorded.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
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File:FAP Basketball logo.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[ "FAP Basketball" ]
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/seomafia.net
== Links == seomafia.net resolves to [//104.28.10.218 104.28.10.218] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. Link is globally blacklisted by \bseomafia\.net\b == Users == No users found. == Additions == No additions recorded.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,275
Category:Christian radio stations in Missouri
[]
62,109,276
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/czechurbex.cz
== Links == czechurbex.cz resolves to [//89.221.213.8 89.221.213.8] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == No users found. == Additions == No additions recorded.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,284
AS Forces Armées (basketball)
AS Forces Armées, also known as ASFA, is a professional basketball team that is based in Senegal. They play in the Senegalese League. The team has won the Africa Clubs Championship three times, being behind only C.D. Primeiro de Agosto for most continental titles. ==History== AS Forces Armées won the FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup three times, in the years 1975, 1979, and 1981. They also competed at the 1976 edition and the 1981 edition of the Intercontinental Cup. ==Honours== FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup Winners (3): 1975, 1979, 1981 Nationale 1 Winners (10): 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1994, 1995 Senegalese Cup Winners (9): 1975, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1987, 1992, 1994, 1995 ==Season by season== Only including seasons starting from 2019.
[ "Intercontinental Cup (basketball)", "FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup", "1976 Intercontinental Cup (basketball)", "Nationale 1 (Senegal)", "basketball", "1981 Intercontinental Cup (basketball)", "C.D. Primeiro de Agosto (basketball)", "COVID-19 pandemic", "2023 Nationale 1 season", "2024 Nationale 1 season", "Dakar", "2022 Nationale 1 season", "Senegal", "2019 Nationale 1 season", "2021 Nationale 1 season", "Senegalese Division I Basketball League" ]
62,109,290
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/sodazaa.com
== Links == http resolves to [//X X] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. sodazaa.com resolves to [//112.121.151.185 112.121.151.185] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. upload.sodazaa.com resolves to [//112.121.151.185 112.121.151.185] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 3 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,293
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/formasis.com
== Links == formasis.com resolves to [//91.234.32.16 91.234.32.16] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == No users found. == Additions == No additions recorded.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,298
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/3dray.kz
== Links == 3dray.kz resolves to [//37.46.131.173 37.46.131.173] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 1 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,305
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/pyxlsxh.com
== Links == pyxlsxh.com resolves to [//111.231.64.79 111.231.64.79] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == No users found. == Additions == No additions recorded.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,306
File:2019 World Series logo.svg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
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Marceliano Santa María Sedano
Marceliano Santa María (18 June 1866 Burgos - 12 October 1952 in Madrid) was a Spanish painter, noted for his Castilian landscapes, historical art, and portraits. == Life == Santa María was born into a religious family with strong religious views. His full name was Marceliano Santa María Sedano, although he always signed as Marceliano Santa María. His uncle, Ángel Sedano, canon from Burgos Cathedral, was the founder of the Círculo Católico de Obreros of Burgos, an institution where his father, a professional silversmith, also belonged. From an early age he began to show talent with painting; people were amazed with his speed drawing portraits. Santa María studied high school in his hometown (although he finished them in Palencia) and attended the Provincial Academy of Drawing of Burgos located in the Paseo del Espolón, where he received the classes of Isidro Gil and Evaristo Barrio His parents were opposed to his artistic vocation, however he always had the support of his uncle, who encouraged him to paint religious matters. Together with his uncle, he moved to Madrid, in 1885, with the intention of attending the classes of the Circle of Fine Arts and San Fernando Academy of Fine Arts. Similarly, he frequently visited the studio of the painter Manuel Domínguez Sánchez, where he concurred with other young painters such as Fernando Álvarez de Sotomayor and Eduardo Chicharro Agüera. Also in 1885, thanks to a landscape canvas, he won the Second Prize at the Exhibition of Fine Arts in Burgos. He studied in Rome between 1891 and 1895 to perfect his technical knowledge, although he visited Spain frequently. He was sponsored by the Diputación de Burgos and during his stay in Italy he painted one of his most famous works: El Triunfo de la Santa Cruz, which was exhibited at the International Exhibition of Madrid and at the Universal Exhibition of Chicago (1893), where he won the unique award medal This canvas represents the famous battle of Las Navas de Tolosa and is currently displayed in the Marceliano Santa María Museum in Burgos. After this success he continued exhibiting his works in the main cities of Spain. === Career === In 1895 Sedano returned to Spain to settle in Burgos, where the Ayuntamiento de Burgos (City Council) required him to paint pictures, murals and ceilings. From this period we can admire the painting El Esquileo (preserved in the Salón de Estrados of the Diputación Provincial de Burgos). From 1900 he dedicated himself to teaching in Burgos, creating a famous school of painters who continued with his style. During this period, the artist made numerous portraits of Alfonso XIII, king of Spain as well as portraits of aristocrats and local bourgeois. However, the nickname of "Painter of Castile" comes from his innumerable landscapes, which convey sensitivity comparable with that shown in literature by the Generation of 98, which considered Castile and its landscapes as the core of Spain. At this time, his most famous painting is Se va ensanchando Castilla (Widening Castilla), which represents the exiled El Cid and presides over the main staircase of Burgos City Hall Building. Later, in 1920 he painted the fresco La Ley triunfando sobre el mal, also known as El vencimiento de los delitos y los vicios ante la aparición de la Justicia, on the ceiling of the Plenary Hall of Spain's Supreme Court Building. This piece shows a goddess, who holds two white horses, how the correct execution of the laws can overcome evil, which would include rape, homicide, and theft, among others. It symbolizes hope and the prevalence of good over evil thanks to the future application of laws. === Last years === In 1934, Marceliano Santa María was appointed director of the Escuela de Artes y Oficios of Madrid. This year, he receives the Medal of Honor at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts. During the Civil War, living in a besieged Madrid, his health worsens and he has to devise solutions to keep painting, since it was impossible to buy proper instruments like paint or canvas. After the Civil War he continued his activity with less intensity, receiving the Extraordinary Gold Medal of the Círculo de Bellas Artes in 1943. He also became, during these years, a mentor, protector and benefactor of young artists such as Luis Sáez Díez. He was recognized also with streets and buildings named on his honor, like Marceliano Santa María promenade, next to Paseo del Espolón in Burgos, a school with his name also in Burgos, Marceliano Santa María street in Madrid (perpendicular to the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium) and other streets in numerous locations, such as in Poza de la Sal. He died in Madrid on October 12, 1952 == Awards == 1893: Medal Award in the World's Columbian Exhibition of Chicago. 1901 and 1910: First Medal Award in the National Exhibition of Madrid. 1929: Gold Medal Award in the Iberoamerican Exhibition of Sevilla. 1934: Honor Medal Award in the National Exhibition of Madrid. 1943: Extraordinary Gold Medal Award of the Círculo de Bellas Artes of Madrid. ===Marceliano Santa María Museum=== Interior of the Marceliano Santa María Museum in the Monastery of San Juan Burgos has a monographic museum with Marceliano Santa María's name, dedicated exclusively to his work. Located inside the monastery of San Juan, it was inaugurated on June 29, 1966, with paintings donated by the painter's family. ===Work in other museums=== Marceliano Santa María's work can also be found in the Modern Art Museums of Madrid and Barcelona, Municipal Museums of Madrid and Barcelona, Museum of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando de Madrid, Army Museum in Toledo, Foundation Museum Camón Aznar de Zaragoza and other museums in Spain, Europe and America and in numerous private collections. ===Society membership=== Academic member of Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando of Madrid from 1913, later Chair of Painture Section, President of the Academia Museum and President of y Presidente of América related academies. Member of Instituto de España. Member of Academia Nacional de Artes y Letras de la Habana. Member of Instituto Arqueológico Iberoamericano de Atenas. Member of galería cultural da Academia brasileira de Bellas Artes. Academic member of Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Carlos de Valencia. Honor academic member Academia burgense Institución Fernán González de Burgos. Principal and Chair professor of Escuela de Artes y Oficios Artísticos de Madrid. Professor of Instituto de San Isidro de Madrid. President of the Asociación de Pintores y Escultores de Madrid. Honour president of Círculo de Bellas Artes de Madrid. President and jury member of numerous National and International Exhibitions in Madrid. President of the Second Congress of Fine Arts. President of the X Commission of Cruz Roja Española Ambassador of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Fortuny centenary in Reus.
[ "El Cid", "International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement", "Manuel Domínguez Sánchez", "Columbian Exposition", "Museo Goya - Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar", "Venice Biennale", "Tribunal Supremo de España", "Círculo de Bellas Artes", "Madrid", "Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Carlos de Valencia", "Burgos", "Fernando Álvarez de Sotomayor y Zaragoza", "World's Columbian Exposition", "Exposición Iberoamericana de Sevilla", "Poza de la Sal", "Circulo de Bellas Artes", "Salon (Paris)", "Spanish Civil War", "Instituto San Isidro", "Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa", "World's Columbian Exhibition", "Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando", "Exposición Hispano-Francesa de 1908", "Exposició General de Belles Arts de Barcelona", "Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando", "Generation of 98", "Monasterio de San Juan", "Imperial Academy of Fine Arts (Brazil)", "Burgos Cathedral" ]
62,109,317
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/maoyouhe.com
== Links == maoyouhe.com resolves to [//106.15.190.93 106.15.190.93] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 6 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,319
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/forum.schwarzes-bw.de
== Links == forum.schwarzes-bw.de resolves to [//134.119.234.198 134.119.234.198] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 1 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,322
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/reismaatjes.nl
== Links == reismaatjes.nl resolves to [//37.139.139.171 37.139.139.171] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 5 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,109,323
Category:University of Mainz
[]
62,109,329
Category:University of Mainz alumni
[]
62,109,332
File:2019 ALCS Logo.svg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
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James Venamun
RedirectLegion (Blatty novel)
[ "Legion (Blatty novel)" ]
62,109,350
Donna Trenton
RedirectCujo
[ "Cujo" ]
62,109,352
Category:Annual sporting events in Costa Rica
[]
62,109,353
File:Wellacre Academy Logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
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Category:Sporting events in Costa Rica
[]
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Category:Annual events in Costa Rica
[]
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File:Norway national football team logo.svg
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
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Category:Adak, Alaska
Adak, Alaska is a city on Adak Island, in the Aleutians West Census Area, southwestern Alaska.
[ "Adak Island", "Aleutians West Census Area, Alaska", "Alaska" ]
62,109,363
Massacre of Glencoe Monument
The Massacre of Glencoe Monument is a memorial to the Massacre of Glencoe (Scottish Gaelic: Mort Ghlinne Comhann), which took place in Glen Coe in the Highlands of Scotland on 13 February 1692, following the Jacobite uprising of 1689–92. Sculpted by Alexander Macdonald and Co. of Aberdeen in 1883, a tapering 18-foot granite Celtic cross soars up from a rugged cairn above the river in Upper Carnoch. Its design is based on the elaborate Gosforth Cross. An annual wreath-laying ceremony is held at the Monument to commemorate those who fell in the massacre.
[ "Massacre of Glencoe", "cairn", "Gosforth Cross", "Scottish Gaelic language", "Aberdeen", "Celtic cross", "Glen Coe", "granite", "Jacobism", "Highlands of Scotland" ]
62,109,366
Category:Algerian women scientists
[ "Algeria", "women scientists" ]
62,109,371
Category:French post-apocalyptic novels
[]
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File:Westbank First Nation logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,109,375
Category:Jamaican people of Welsh descent
[]
62,109,377
Category:Caribbean people of Welsh descent
[]
62,109,385
Category:Swedish horror novels
[]
62,109,386
Category:Jewish radio stations in the United States
[]
62,109,399
Category:2022 in Turkey
[]
62,109,412
Susan River, Queensland
{{Infobox Australian place | type = suburb | name = Susan River | city = | state = qld | image = | caption = | coordinates = | pop = 115 | pop_year = | pop_footnotes = In the , Susan River had a population of 115 people. Maryborough–Hervey Bay Road (State Route 57) runs through from south-west to north-west. == Demographics == In the , Susan River had a population of 136 people. In the , Susan River had a population of 115 people. == Education == There are no schools in Susan River. The nearest government primary schools are Yarrilee State School in Urraween, Hervey Bay, to the north and St Helens State School in St Helens, Maryborough, to the south-west. The nearest government secondary schools are Hervey Bay State High School in Pialba, Hervey Bay, to the north and Aldridge State High School in Maryborough to the south-west.
[ "Walliebum, Queensland", "River Heads, Queensland", "Maryborough–Hervey Bay Road", "Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)", "Brisbane", "Queensland", "St Helens, Queensland (Fraser Coast Region)", "Pialba", "Great Sandy Strait", "Walligan, Queensland", "Electoral district of Hervey Bay", "Hervey Bay", "Maryborough, Queensland", "Queensland Government", "Mary River (Queensland)", "Sunshine Acres, Queensland", "Fraser Coast Region", "Division of Wide Bay", "Suburbs and localities (Australia)", "Urraween, Queensland", "Bundaberg", "Susan River (Queensland)", "Tandora, Queensland", "Division of Hinkler", "AEST" ]
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Category:2010s disestablishments in Palau
[]
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Category:San Jacinto, California
[]
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Category:Disestablishments in Palau by decade
[]
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Joseph Conlin
Joseph or Joe Conlin may refer to: Joseph H. Conlin, American impresario and opera director. Joseph R. Conlin, professor of American history Joe Conlin, American football coach
[ "Joe Conlin", "Joseph R. Conlin", "Joseph H. Conlin", "Joseph Conlan" ]
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Category:21st-century disestablishments in Palau
[]
62,109,423
Wikipedia:Userboxes/Drink/Coffee
This gallery includes userbox templates about coffee. ===Coffee===
[ "coffee" ]
62,109,424
Category:Christian radio stations in New Jersey
[]
62,109,427
Category:Disestablishments in Palau by century
[]
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Category:3rd-millennium disestablishments in Palau
[]
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File:Splatoon 2 Octo Expansion.jpg
== Summary == ==Licensing==
[ "Nintendo", "Nintendo Entertainment Planning & Development" ]
62,109,434
Category:Disestablishments in Palau by millennium
[]
62,109,435
M. Rashiduzzaman Millat
M. Rashiduzzaman Millat is a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and a former member of parliament for Jamalpur-1. ==Career== Millat was elected to parliament from Jamalpur-1 as a Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate in 2001. In 2007, Millat was sentenced to six years imprisonment for tax dodging. Bangladesh Supreme Court barred him from contesting the 2018 elections due to his conviction.
[ "Bangladesh Nationalist Party", "Bangladesh Supreme Court", "Jamalpur-1" ]
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Category:Belizean cricketers
[]
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Category:Hindu radio stations
[]
62,109,464
Sunshine Acres, Queensland
{{Infobox Australian place | type = suburb | name = Sunshine Acres | city = | state = qld | image = | caption = | coordinates = | pop = 1009 | pop_year = | pop_footnotes = In the , Sunshine Acres had a population of 1,009 people. == Demographics == In the , Sunshine Acres had a population of 949 people. In the , Sunshine Acres had a population of 1,009 people. == Education == There are no schools in Sunshine Acres. The nearest government primary school is Yarrilee State School in Urraween to the north. The nearest government secondary school is Hervey Bay State High School in Pialba to the north-east.
[ "Urraween, Queensland", "Bundaberg", "Bunya Creek, Queensland", "Susan River, Queensland", "Susan River (Queensland)", "Maryborough–Hervey Bay Road", "Division of Hinkler", "Maryborough, Queensland", "Queensland Government", "Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)", "Brisbane", "Fraser Coast Region", "Queensland", "Pialba", "Nikenbah, Queensland", "AEST", "Walligan, Queensland", "Suburbs and localities (Australia)" ]
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File:Sandman, Map of Halaal, role-playing supplement.jpg
== Summary ==
[]
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Category:Hindu television
[]
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Walliebum, Queensland
{{Infobox Australian place | type = suburb | name = Walliebum | city = | state = qld | image = | caption = | coordinates = | pop = 0 | pop_year = | pop_footnotes = In the , Walliebum had "no people or a very low population". == Demographics == In the , Walliebum had "no people or a very low population".
[ "Susan River, Queensland", "Prawle, Queensland", "Tandora, Queensland", "Maryborough–Hervey Bay Road", "Dundathu, Queensland", "Aldershot, Queensland", "Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)", "Fraser Coast Region", "Queensland", "Division of Wide Bay", "Burgowan, Queensland", "Duckinwilla, Queensland", "AEST", "Walligan, Queensland", "Suburbs and localities (Australia)" ]
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Wikipedia:Userboxes/Education/National
This page includes links to userbox template galleries about education by country. __TOC__ ==Education by country==
[ "education", "country" ]