page_id
int64 12
2.54M
| title
stringlengths 1
261
| cleaned_text
stringlengths 0
753k
| linked_titles
listlengths 0
29.9k
|
---|---|---|---|
62,110,777 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/MetArt
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was speedy keep. Nomination effectively withdrawn by requesting deletion of the AFD page by the nominator (non-admin closure) Atlantic306 (talk) 15:54, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
===:MetArt===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Fails WP:CORPDEPTH and WP:GNG. Awards are not prestigious. Störm (talk) 10:27, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Companies-related deletion discussions. CASSIOPEIA(talk) 11:08, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Websites-related deletion discussions. CASSIOPEIA(talk) 11:08, 20 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",
"MetArt",
"WP:CORPDEPTH"
] |
62,110,796 |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Grass snake
|
===Grass snake===
Voting period ends on 30 Oct 2019 at 10:33:05 (UTC)
Reason:Currently doing very well on Commons FPC - good focus and composition.
Articles in which this image appears:Natrix natrix
FP category for this image:Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Animals/Reptiles
Creator:Hockei
Support any as nominator – MER-C 10:33, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support prefer Alt 1 – but I prefer this composition, more of the body. Bammesk (talk) 14:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Added as an alternative. MER-C 15:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support either one. Geoffroi 01:04, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Support either, prefer Alt 1. Both are great, but I like Alt 1's composition more. Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 22:20, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Support -- I like either. Poydoo (talk) 11:31, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Support - Prefer original, but alt 1 is good too DannyS712 (talk) 07:12, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Support - DreamSparrow Chat 12:45, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
--Armbrust The Homunculus 11:00, 30 October 2019 (UTC)
More users prefered alt 1 over the original. Armbrust The Homunculus 11:00, 30 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"WP:FP",
"c:user:hockei",
"Natrix natrix"
] |
62,110,797 |
Ilha do Algodão
|
Ilha do Algodão () () is an island 400 meters away from the historic village of Mambucaba, 6 km northeast of Angra Nuclear Power Plant, in the municipality of Angra dos Reis, southeast of the state of Rio de Janeiro.
==History==
Records of the time indicate that in 1611, a Baiano (a man from the state of Bahia) would have been granted the island, at the tip of Iperuquara (possibly the one that separates Mambucaba from Praia Vermelha). Also recorded is an island of 200 fathoms in the same locality, granted to Estácio Ferreira in 1619 (possibly Ilha do Algodão).
|
[
"List of islands of Brazil",
"Southeast Region, Brazil",
"Rio de Janeiro (state)",
"Bahia",
"Mambucaba",
"Angra dos Reis",
"Angra Nuclear Power Plant",
"Brazil"
] |
62,110,803 |
Dunmora, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Dunmora
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 281
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Dunmora had a population of 281 people.
The northern part of the locality is within the Wongi State Forest. The southern part of the locality is predominantly used for grazing on native vegetation with some crop growing and rural residential housing.
== History ==
In 1880, residents were lobbying for a school to be established. Dunmora Provisional School opened circa 1881. On 1 January 1909, it became Dunmora State School. It closed in 1912.
Dunmora Central Provisional School opened in 1899. On 1 January 1909, it became Dunmora Central State School. It closed in 1931. It reopened on 15 September 1936 before closing permanently in 1941.
== Demographics ==
In the , Dunmora had a population of 222 people.
In the , Dunmora had a population of 281 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Dunmora. The nearest government primary schools are Sunbury State School in Maryborough to the east and Mungar State School in Mungar to the south-east. The nearest government secondary school is Aldridge State High School, also in Maryborough.
== Facilities ==
Dunmora Rural Fire Station is on the southern side of Old Gayndah Road ().
|
[
"Yerra, Queensland",
"Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser",
"rural residential",
"Oakhurst, Queensland",
"Hervey Bay",
"Pastoralism",
"Yengarie, Queensland",
"Maryborough, Queensland",
"Queensland Government",
"Maryborough–Biggenden Road",
"Mungar",
"Gungaloon, Queensland",
"Thinoomba, Queensland",
"Aldershot, Queensland",
"Fraser Coast Region",
"Division of Wide Bay",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)",
"Queensland Family History Society",
"Duckinwilla, Queensland",
"AEST"
] |
62,110,830 |
Joes
|
Joes may refer to:
Joes, Colorado, a settlement in the United States
Joes Mountain, several mountains
Jef Joes, or just Joes, an island in West Papua, Indonesia
Joes, a term used for the banknotes of Demerary and Essequibo
|
[
"Jef Joes",
"Joes, Colorado",
"banknotes of Demerary and Essequibo",
"Joe (disambiguation)",
"Joes Mountain (disambiguation)"
] |
62,110,846 |
Jetten
|
Jetten is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Jolanda Jetten (born 1970), Dutch social psychologist and a professor at the University of Queensland
Mike Jetten (born 1962), Dutch professor of Microbiology
Peter Jetten (born 1985), Canadian professional poker player
Rob Jetten (born 1987), Dutch politician
|
[
"Jolanda Jetten",
"Peter Jetten",
"Mike Jetten",
"Rob Jetten"
] |
62,110,880 |
County Hall, Caernarfon
|
County Hall () is a former municipal facility at Castle Ditch in Caernarfon, Wales. The County Hall, which was the headquarters of Caernarfonshire County Council from 1889 to 1974, is a Grade I listed building.
==History==
The current structure was commissioned to replace an earlier courthouse which had its origins in the justiciar's courthouse which was built in the south west corner of the town in around 1296. The remains of this earlier structure, which was located within the town walls, were preserved within the foundations of the new building.
The new building, which was designed by John Thomas, the county surveyor, in the Neo-classical style opened as Caernarvonshire Shire Hall in 1863. A memorial to the County of Carnarvon Boer War Volunteers who had died in the Second Boer War was unveiled in the building on 2 July 1904. Following its closure in 1921, the former County Gaol, located to the north of the County Hall was converted to create additional facilities for the county council. The former Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, chaired the quarter sessions in the building from 1929 to 1938.
After the county council was abolished in 1974, the old County Hall then became the home of the Crown Court and Magistrates' Court. who converted part of the building into an eight bedroom home, before putting it up for sale in September 2016. It was acquired by a musician, Moira Hartley, in February 2018; she carried out an extensive restoration to the building and converted it into a concert hall and restaurant. The Crown Court became the concert hall while the magistrates' court and the witness room were both converted into dining facilities.
Works of art in County Hall included a bust of Thomas Bulkeley, 7th Viscount Bulkeley and a bas relief of Edward Douglas-Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn, both of whom served as Lord Lieutenant of Caernarvonshire.
|
[
"pediment",
"Neoclassical architecture",
"tetrastyle",
"listed building",
"Court of quarter sessions",
"Lady Justice",
"bas relief",
"Prime Minister of the United Kingdom",
"Council Offices, Caernarfon",
"Local Government Act 1888",
"Caernarfon",
"David Lloyd George",
"portico",
"Caernarfonshire",
"triglyph",
"Thomas Bulkeley, 7th Viscount Bulkeley",
"Caernarfon Criminal Justice Centre",
"frieze",
"Doric order",
"Second Boer War",
"scallop",
"Edward Douglas-Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn",
"Lord Lieutenant of Caernarvonshire",
"justiciar"
] |
62,110,885 |
Category:Heritage buildings and structures in Thailand
|
[] |
|
62,110,888 |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/delist/Stereogram
|
=== Stereogram===
Voting period ends on 30 Oct 2019 at 10:47:36 (UTC)
Reason:Not used in any articles. Recently promoted FP :File:Passiflora caerulea STEREO (R-L) 2019-06-27.jpg is functionally equivalent.
Articles this image appears in:None
Previous nomination/s:Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Asiatic hybrid lillium stereogram.jpg
Nominator: MER-C
Delist — MER-C 10:47, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delist per nom. Mattximus (talk) 20:06, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delist – Bammesk (talk) 22:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delist Geoffroi 01:01, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delist per disuse. —David Eppstein (talk) 17:20, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delist - per disuse; its a shame, its a really nice photo DannyS712 (talk) 07:11, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
--Armbrust The Homunculus 11:10, 30 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"File:Passiflora caerulea STEREO (R-L) 2019-06-27.jpg"
] |
62,110,891 |
Grahams Creek, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Grahams Creek
| city =
| state = qld
| image = StateLibQld 2 234280 High trestle railway bridge at Graham Creek west of Maryborough, 1882.jpg
| caption = High trestle railway bridge carrying the North Coast railway line over Grahams Creek, 1882
| coordinates =
| pop = 149
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Grahams Creek had a population of 149 people.
The North Coast railway line enters the locality from the south (Mungar) and exits to the north (Yengarie).
The land use is a mixture of grazing on native vegetation, crop growing, and rural residential housing.
The construction of the railway line from Gympie to Maryborough in the late 1870s (now part of the North Coast railway line) was delayed by the difficulties of crossing Graham's Creek () which required considerable ingenuity to construct a bridge. The line was officially opened in August 1881.
In 1916, the railway bridge's superstructure was replaced and the bridge strengthened. This was to enable the use of the heavier B17 class locomotives.
In May 2012, a saltwater crocodile was found in the Mary River between Brothers Island and the mainland near the locality of Beaver Rock, significantly further south than the normal range for such a crocodile. As per Queensland Government policy, crocodiles spotted south of the Boyne River are trapped and relocated to their natural habitat by wildlife official. However, the crocodile eluded the trap for many months, with wildlife officials reporting confirmed sightings of a second smaller crocodile in the river in July 2013. The smaller female crocodile was trapped in November 2013. In November 2014, the larger male crocodile was harpooned approximately up the river at Grahams Creek to be relocated to Koorana crocodile farm at Rockhampton.
== Demographics ==
In the , Grahams Creek had a population of 157 people.
In the , Grahams Creek had a population of 149 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Grahams Creek. The nearest government primary school is Mungar State School in neighbouring Mungar to the south. The nearest government secondary school is Aldridge State High School in Maryborough to the north-east.
|
[
"Mungar, Queensland",
"Yerra, Queensland",
"Fraser Coast Chronicle",
"Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser",
"Boyne River (Central Queensland)",
"Hervey Bay, Queensland",
"rural residential",
"Tinana, Queensland",
"Pastoralism",
"Rockhampton",
"Yengarie, Queensland",
"Maryborough, Queensland",
"Queensland Government",
"Mary River (Queensland)",
"Mungar",
"Maryborough Chronicle",
"Fraser Coast Region",
"Division of Wide Bay",
"Gympie",
"saltwater crocodile",
"North Coast railway line, Queensland",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)",
"The Courier-Mail",
"Beaver Rock, Queensland",
"Tinana South, Queensland",
"The Brisbane Courier",
"Queensland B17 class locomotive",
"AEST"
] |
62,110,892 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/Cspathway
|
== Links ==
cspathway.xyz resolves to [//35.187.234.176 35.187.234.176]
Link is not on the blacklist.
COIBot domainredlist search for link Cspathway gives:
cspathway.xyz (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
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.
google.com resolves to [//172.217.15.78 172.217.15.78]
Link is not on the blacklist.
COIBot domainredlist search for link Cspathway gives:
google.com (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
google.com (Automonitor: reported to :m:Talk:Spam blacklist (diff))
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \bgoogle\.com\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:Spam blacklist (diff - )).
pharmaeducator.com resolves to [//35.185.177.139 35.185.177.139]
Link is not on the blacklist.
COIBot domainredlist search for link Cspathway gives:
pharmaeducator.com (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
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.
www,pharmaeducator.com resolves to [//X X]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 5 additions.
|
[
"m:Talk:Spam blacklist",
"m:Spam blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot",
"en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist"
] |
62,110,893 |
Category:Heritage buildings and structures in Spain
|
[] |
|
62,110,894 |
File:You Need Loving.ogg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,110,896 |
Dennis Guilder
|
RedirectChristine (King novel)
|
[
"Christine (King novel)"
] |
62,110,899 |
Yossef Guez
|
Yosef Guez (1860 in Sousse – 1934), also known as Youssef Guez and Youssef el Guidj, was a Grand Rabbi of Tunisia. He served in Sousse (1906–1928) then in Tunis (1928–1934) where he served as Grand Rabbi of Tunisia until his death.
==Biography==
Guez was the grandson of the namesake Rabbi Yosef Guez, whose name he received according to the Sephardic tradition. He is the son of Rabbi Chaim David Guez and a direct descendant of the Chief Rabbi David Guez who was a Talmudist of North Africa.
He founded the synagogue Keter Torah (כתר תורה), now the only synagogue in Sousse.
Some stories were collected about him and his life in 1990.
==Works==
He was the author of several books and manuscripts, including:
A collection of halachic decisions that was published in 2008: Yagen HaShem;
1931 - A manual of preparation for the Bar Mitzvah of the Grand Rabbinate of Tunis.
1903–1908 - יקרא דשכבי Sermons on the deceased by Rabbi Sermons on the deceased by Rabbi Yosef Gaz during his tenure in the cities of Mahdia and Susa in the years 1903-1908.
==Honours==
He was decorated by the French President Gaston Doumergue, Knight of the Legion of Honor in 1929.
|
[
"Tunisia",
"Gaston Doumergue",
"National Library of Israel",
"Hillel Bakis",
"Sousse",
"Tunis",
"Legion of Honor",
"halachic",
"Grand Rabbi",
"Bar Mitzvah",
"Jewish Telegraphic Agency"
] |
62,110,900 |
Category:FA-Class Catalonia articles
|
[] |
|
62,110,901 |
Category:FL-Class Catalonia articles
|
[] |
|
62,110,903 |
Category:A-Class Catalonia articles
|
[] |
|
62,110,906 |
Category:GA-Class Catalonia articles
|
[] |
|
62,110,907 |
Category:Portal-Class Catalonia pages
|
[] |
|
62,110,910 |
Onward Indonesia Cabinet
|
The Onward Indonesia Cabinet () was sworn in on 23 October 2019 by President Joko Widodo. The president reshuffled this cabinet 13 times. The last reshuffle occurred on 11 September 2024.
==Lineup==
===Heads of the cabinet===
===Coordinating ministers===
===Ministers===
===Deputy ministers===
===Other positions===
==Reshuffles==
===First reshuffle===
On 22 December 2020, the president replaced six ministers. The most notable addition to the cabinet was businessman Sandiaga Uno. His admission into the cabinet following his former running mate in the 2019 presidential election Prabowo Subianto, made it the first time in Indonesia's history that all former contestants of a single presidential election were in the same cabinet. The new ministers were sworn in on 23 December 2020. Five deputy ministers were also appointed, three of them to new deputy minister positions.
===Second reshuffle===
On 30 March 2021, the president proposed to the People's Representative Council changes to the structure of his cabinet, seeking to merge the Ministry of Research and Technology and the Ministry of Education and Culture into a single ministry named the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology. He also proposed a new ministry, the Ministry of Investment to be spun off from the Coordinating Ministry for Maritime and Investments Affairs, but remaining under the latter's coordination, while the National Research and Innovation Agency would be separated as a new non-ministerial agency. On 9 April 2021, the People's Representative Council approved the changes. On 13 April 2021, presidential spokesman Ali Mochtar Ngabalin said the second reshuffle would take place in the second week of April. However, the reshuffle was announced on 28 April 2021. Unusually, it not only reshuffled some ministers, but also disbanded a ministerial institution during the mid-term.
===Third reshuffle===
Since the National Mandate Party joined the government coalition on 25 August 2021, there has been controversy over a potential third cabinet reshuffle to allow the party to join the cabinet. On 23 September 2021, the party stated to be ready to take place and contributing together with the government in the cabinet. It was said that the third reshuffle will take place between the end of September 2021 and early October 2021; however, the deadline passed and no reshuffle took place. On 25 October 2021, President Spokesperson Fadjroel Rachman was appointed as Indonesian Ambassador to Kazakhstan, leaving his post vacant. The position was then filled by Joko Widodo himself.
On 17 November 2021, the question of the third reshuffle arose again. However, sources from unnamed president officials revealed that the future reshuffle was not because of issues regarding minister performance, but due to replacement after several ministers contracted COVID-19 and became physically disabled, severely limiting their ability to serve in their positions. Since the end of 2020, Joko Widodo opened many deputy minister posts in many ministries, however, the positions are yet to be filled. This includes the Deputy Minister post at Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources, adding to the long list of vacant deputy minister posts created in his presidency. On 18 November 2021, the People's Consultative Assembly formally requested Joko Widodo to conduct a reshuffle as fast as possible due to the large number of vacant deputy minister positions.
On 8 March 2022, a question of the third reshuffle arose again. This time there was a rumor that National Mandate Party will gain a position in the cabinet and the reshuffle will be done in late March 2022. The rumor was quickly dispelled by Zulkifli Hasan, the party leader himself. In fact, the third reshuffle realized on 10 March 2022. In the third reshuffle, Bambang Susantono was inaugurated as the Head of Nusantara Capital City Authority, and Dhony Rahajoe was inaugurated as the Deputy Head of Nusantara Capital City Authority.
===Fourth reshuffle===
On 15 June 2022, the fourth reshuffle occurred. In this reshuffle, 2 ministers reshuffled, and 3 deputy ministers were set up. A Deputy minister post, Deputy Minister of Public Works and Housing is vacated. He died after being hospitalized at Abdi Waluyo Hospital in Jakarta on 1 July 2022. Potential fifth reshuffle will be announced later after mourning period. Fifth reshuffle likely done after 15 July 2022, coincidentally at the day with the end of mourning period and Tito Karnavian limit of ad interim. On 15 July, Mahfud MD appointed as acting Minister of Administrative and Bureaucratic Reform. On 7 September 2022, Abdullah Azwar Anas become Minister of Administrative and Bureaucratic Reform in the fifth reshuffle.
===Sixth reshuffle===
Nasdem Party declared Joko Widodo's political rival, Anies Baswedan, as a presidential candidate on October 3, 2022. As the result, pro-Joko Widodo side voiced and promoted the reshuffle and expelled Nasdem Party from the cabinet. On 23 December 2022, Joko Widodo announced he will reshuffle his cabinet, although not giving much detail which minister that will be reshuffled. The Executive Office of the President of the Republic of Indonesia confirmed that the reshuffle will be realized in January 2023, but it never happened until the time past.
Zainuddin Amali expressed his intention to step down his position as Minister of Youth and Sport Affairs after being elected as Indonesian Football Association vice president. His intention finally realized and Joko Widodo accepted his resignation on 13 March 2023. On 16 March 2023, Zainuddin Amali stepped down from the minister position and replaced with Muhadjir Effendy as acting minister. The sixth reshuffle took place 3 April 2023. In this occasion, Dito Ariotedjo of Golkar Party, appointed as replacement of Zainuddin Amali. He was the first Indonesian millennial appointed as the minister.
===Seventh reshuffle===
On 17 May 2023, Minister of Communication and Information Technology Johnny G. Plate arrested due to corruption, leaving potential seventh reshuffle opened. On 19 May 2023, Mahfud MD appointed as acting minister. On 17 July 2023, Joko Widodo reshuffled his cabinet. In this reshuffle, he placed Budi Arie Setiadi placed as the new minister of Communication and Information Technology. He also placed other deputy ministers as well.
===Eighth reshuffle===
On 3 August 2023, Amarulla Octavian, appointed as the Deputy Chairman of National Research and Innovation Agency.
===Ninth reshuffle===
Potential ninth reshuffle currently opened after several ministers suspected to be involved in legal cases. In same time, on 2 October 2023, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono met Joko Widodo, further opening speculation of incoming reshuffle.
Nasdem Party confirmed that Syahrul Yasin Limpo resigned as Minister of Agriculture on 5 October 2023 over corruption case. Istana Negara also confirmed the incoming reshuffle will be happened. On 6 October 2023, Arief Prasetyo Adi appointed as acting Minister of Agriculture. On 25 October 2023, Amran Sulaiman, Minister of Agriculture of Joko Widodo's previous administration recalled from his retirement and assumed the post again.
===Tenth reshuffle===
On 21 February 2024, Joko Widodo reshuffled his cabinet. In this occasion, Hadi Tjahjanto became Coordinating Minister of Political, Legal, and Security Affairs replacing Mahfud MD and Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono became Minister of Agrarian Affairs and Spatial Planning/Head of National Land Agency replacing Hadi Tjahjanto.
Joko Widodo said that he might reshuffle his cabinet again despite only having 8 months remaining in his presidency.
The tenth reshuffle further cemented Joko Widodo's political position in his remaining period of his presidency, with almost all parties in legislature except Prosperous Justice Party currently on his administration side. With the joining of Democratic Party to Joko Widodo side, for the first time since its formation, Democratic Party joined a PDI-P backed government. The joining of Democratic Party also showed Joko Widodo's separation from PDI-P's power and influence.
===Eleventh reshuffle===
Eleventh reshuffle happened on 18 July 2024. In this reshuffle, Deputy Ministers for Agriculture, Investment, and Finance were appointed. In this reshuffle, Thomas Djiwandono become Second Deputy Minister of Finance. Sudaryono become Deputy Minister of Agriculture replacing Harvick Hasnul Qolbi. Yuliot Tanjung become Deputy Minister of Investment.
In unusual move, Thomas Djiwandono, Prabowo's nephew and member of Prabowo's Presidential Transitional Team made into Deputy Minister of Finance. This is for the first time in Indonesia history, a part of transitional team of future administration entering outgoing administration for transitional purpose.
===Twelfth reshuffle===
On 15 August 2024, Joko Widodo signed formation of two of Prabowo's future cabinet-level agencies, Presidential Communication Office (subsuming previous Presidential Spokesperson office and strategic communication section of Executive Office of the President of the Republic of Indonesia) and National Nutrition Agency to facilitate Prabowo's free lunch program.
On 19 August 2024, Joko Widodo reshuffled the cabinet. More members of Prabowo's Presidential Transitional Team joined his cabinet. In this reshuffle, the Minister of Law and Human Rights, Minister of Investment, and Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources were replaced. A Deputy Minister, Second Deputy Minister of Communication and Information Technology, added. Two chiefs of future cabinet-level agencies of Prabowo, the Presidential Communication Office and National Nutrition Agency, were also appointed, activating them even before his administration started.
===Thirteenth reshuffle===
On 11 September 2024, Saifullah Yusuf replaced Tri Rismaharini as Minister of Social Affairs.
|
[
"Ministry of Finance (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Public Works and People's Housing (Indonesia)",
"Moeldoko",
"Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono",
"Indonesian Solidarity Party",
"Agus Suparmanto",
"Executive Office of the President of the Republic of Indonesia",
"Amran Sulaiman",
"Coordinating Ministry for Human Development and Cultural Affairs",
"List of ministers of law and human rights",
"Prosperous Justice Party",
"2019 Indonesian general election",
"List of ministers of agrarian affairs and spatial planning",
"Juliari Batubara",
"Ministry of Agrarian Affairs and Spatial Planning",
"Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan",
"Deputy Head of National Land Agency",
"Ministry of State-Owned Enterprises (Indonesia)",
"Zulkifli Hasan",
"Mahfud MD",
"Ministry of Industry (Indonesia)",
"id:Muhammad Lutfi",
"Siti Nurbaya Bakar",
"id:Fadjroel Rachman",
"Ministry of Trade (Indonesia)",
"Yaqut Cholil Qoumas",
"id:Arief Prasetyo Adi",
"National Nutrition Agency",
"National Awakening Party",
"Joko Widodo",
"id:Surya Tjandra",
"Gerindra Party",
"Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Indonesia)",
"Edward Omar Sharif Hiariej",
"id:Sudaryono",
"Abdurrahman Wahid",
"Basuki Hadimuljono",
"Abdul Halim Iskandar",
"Presidential Communication Office (Indonesia)",
"Teten Masduki",
"Arifin Tasrif",
"Retno Marsudi",
"Millennials",
"National Mandate Party",
"id:Jerry Sambuaga",
"Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono",
"Abdullah Azwar Anas",
"id:Paiman Raharjo",
"Democratic Party (Indonesia)",
"Tjahjo Kumolo",
"Saifullah Yusuf",
"NasDem Party",
"Dhony Rahajoe",
"Edhy Prabowo",
"Ministry of Women Empowerment and Child Protection",
"Kazakhstan",
"Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs (Indonesia)",
"Nadiem Makarim",
"Mahendra Siregar",
"Ministry of Tourism (Indonesia)",
"id:Pahala Mansury",
"Sri Mulyani",
"Ministry of Education and Culture (Indonesia)",
"Nusantara Capital City Authority",
"Erick Thohir",
"Ma'ruf Amin",
"Ministry of Religious Affairs (Indonesia)",
"Alue Dohong",
"COVID-19",
"Syahrul Yasin Limpo",
"Pramono Anung",
"Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle",
"id:Zainut Tauhid Sa'adi",
"Budi Karya Sumadi",
"Coordinating Ministry for Maritime and Investments Affairs (Indonesia)",
"Muhadjir Effendy",
"Minister of Home Affairs (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Defense (Indonesia)",
"Raja Juli Antoni",
"Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education (Indonesia)",
"Minister of State Owned Enterprises (Indonesia)",
"id:Hasan Nasbi",
"Red and White Cabinet",
"People's Consultative Assembly",
"Ministry of Communication and Information Technology (Indonesia)",
"People's Representative Council",
"Golkar",
"Perindo Party",
"id:Suahasil Nazara",
"Fachrul Razi",
"id:Nezar Patria",
"Muhammad Herindra",
"Ministry of Research and Technology/National Research and Innovation Agency (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology (Indonesia)",
"Supermajority",
"Head of Tourism and Creative Economy Agency",
"id:Yuliot Tanjung",
"Politics of Indonesia",
"Ministry of Cooperatives and Small and Medium Enterprises (Indonesia)",
"Head of Investment Coordinating Board",
"Angela Tanoesoedibjo",
"Ida Fauziyah",
"I Gusti Ayu Bintang Darmawati",
"Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (Indonesia)",
"Pratikno",
"Ministry of Health (Indonesia)",
"Bambang Susantono",
"Ministry of Transportation (Indonesia)",
"Supratman Andi Agtas",
"John Wempi Wetipo",
"Sofyan Djalil",
"Ministry of Public Works and Housing (Indonesia)",
"Cabinet Secretariat (Indonesia)",
"Dito Ariotedjo",
"Ministry of State Secretariat (Indonesia)",
"Sandiaga Uno",
"id:Angga Raka Prabowo",
"Budi Gunadi Sadikin",
"Zainudin Amali",
"Minister of Villages and Development of Disadvantaged Regions",
"Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs",
"National Unity Cabinet",
"id:Harvick Hasnul Qolbi",
"United Development Party",
"Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (Indonesia)",
"National Land Agency (Indonesia)",
"List of ministers of defense (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Communications and Digitals",
"id:Saiful Rahmat Dasuki",
"id:Afriansyah Noor",
"Bahlil Lahadalia",
"Rosan Roeslani",
"Working Cabinet (2014–2019)",
"List of Presidential Spokespersons of the Republic of Indonesia",
"Wishnutama",
"Crescent Star Party (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Environment and Forestry (Indonesia)",
"id:Kartika Wirjoatmodjo",
"Minister of Finance (Indonesia)",
"Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita",
"National Research and Innovation Agency (Indonesia)",
"Tri Rismaharini",
"Ministry of Law and Human Rights (Indonesia)",
"Airlangga Hartarto",
"Johnny G. Plate",
"List of ministers of social affairs (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of Manpower (Indonesia)",
"Budi Arie Setiadi",
"Tito Karnavian",
"National Research and Innovation Agency",
"Bambang Brodjonegoro",
"Amarulla Octavian",
"Ministry of Agriculture (Indonesia)",
"Sakti Wahyu Trenggono",
"Deputy Head of Tourism and Creative Economy Agency",
"Ministry of Youth and Sports (Indonesia)",
"Ministry of State Apparatus Utilization and Bureaucratic Reform",
"Terawan Agus Putranto",
"Ministry of Villages and Development of Disadvantaged Regions",
"Ministry of National Development Planning of Indonesia",
"Suharso Monoarfa",
"Hadi Tjahjanto",
"Coordinating Ministry for Maritime and Investment Affairs",
"Ministry of Investment (Indonesia)",
"id:Dante Saksono Harbuwono",
"Prabowo Subianto",
"Head of National Development Planning Agency",
"Thomas Djiwandono",
"Yasonna Laoly"
] |
62,110,913 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Kalki Avatar and Muhammad (book) (3rd nomination)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. RL0919 (talk) 23:46, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Kalki Avatar and Muhammad (book)===
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Previous AfD lacked any participation and also lacked a proper deletion rationale, therefore I am renominating it on the basis that this subject fails WP:GNG, WP:NBOOK and the subject violates WP:FRINGE. Bharatiya29 10:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Literature-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 11:00, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Fail WP:N, WP:NBOOK. Here are the sources and their analysis:
1: Prakash, Ishwar (9 April 2019). "संस्कृत के क्षेत्र में विशिष्ट योगदान देने पर डा. वेद प्रकाश को मिला राष्ट्रपति सम्मान". Haryana Express. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book in this dead link.
2: "डॉ वेद प्रकाश उपाध्याय को मिलेगा राष्ट्रपति सम्मान-2018". khaskhabar. 20 August 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book.*3: "डॉ. वेद प्रकाश उपाध्याय को राष्टऊपति सम्मान". aggarjanpatrika.com. 9 April 2019. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book.[http://aggarjanpatrika.com/news/6248-%E0%A4%A1%E0%A5%89-%E0%A4%B5%E0%A5%87%E0%A4%A6-%E0%A4%AA%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%95%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%B6-%E0%A4%89%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A7%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AF%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%AF-%E0%A4%95%E0%A5%8B-%E0%A4%B0%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%B7%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%9F%E0%A4%8A%E0%A4%AA%E0%A4%A4%E0%A4%BF-%E0%A4%B8%E0%A4%AE%E0%A5%8D%E0%A4%AE%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A8.aspx
4: "President Awards the Certificate of Honour and Maharshi Badrayan Vyas Samman for the Year 2018". pib.nic.in. Press Information Bureau. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book.*5: "PDF President Awards the Certificate of Honour and Maharshi ... - MHRD". mhrd.gov.in. Ministry of Human Resource Development. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book in this [https://mhrd.gov.in/sites/upload_files/mhrd/files/PR_PRESIDENT_AWARD_2018.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwiDrOGp__fjAhX9ILcAHT_YAxYQFjANegQICBAB&usg=AOvVaw06v8gcUtvwuwmn4VeX4DKM dead link.
6: "President Award". www.sanskrit.nic.in. Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Nothing about the book.
7: Upādhyāya, Veda Prakāśa (1969). Kalki avatāra aura Muhammada Sāhaba (in Hindi). Viśva Ekatā Prakāśana. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
Description about the author in this unreliable source. Nothing about the book.
8: Khan, Q.S. Holy Vedas and Islam. Q.S. Khan's Books. p. 44. ISBN 9789380778112. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
Passing mention in an unreliable source.
9: Pavitra Ved aur Islam Dharm (in Hindi). Q.S. Khan's Books. p. 33.
Passing mention in an unreliable source.
10: Vidyarthi, Abdul Haque (1997). Muhammad in World Scriptures. Dar-ul-Isha'at Kutub-e-Islamia. p. 338. ISBN 9788190053785. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
Passing mention in an unreliable missionary source.
11: Rizvi, Sayyid Saeed Akhtar (2001). Prophecies about the Holy Prophet of Islam in Hindu, Christian, Jewish & Parsi Scriptures. Bilal Muslim Mission of Tanzania. p. 8. ISBN 9789987620210. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
Unreliable missionary source.
12: Abdul Haque Vidyarthi (1990). Muhammad in World Scriptures. Adam publishers.
No page number or any verification.
13: Abdul Haq Vidyarthi; U. Ali (1990). Muhammad in Parsi, Hindu & Buddhist Scriptures. IB.
No page number or any verification.
14: "OUR DIALOGUE * Kaliki Avtar". www.islamicvoice.com (November 1997). Islamic Voice. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
Unreliable source not proving notability.
15: Mir Abdul Majeed (15 February 2005). "ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVES: Prophet Muhammad in Hindu Scriptures". www.milligazette.com. The Milli Gazette. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
Dubious opinion piece which says the book is "recently published book" while the article claiming it was published in 1969.
16: Khan, Q. S. Muhammad Sahab: Holy Narashansa (in Urdu). Urdu-Books. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Unreliable publisher and just a passing mention.
17: Pāla, Alakarañjana (1995). Agnigarbhā Kāśmīra (in Bengali). Sāhityaloka. p. 101. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Irrelevant passing mention on unreliable source.
18: Sikand, Yoginder (2008). Pseudo-messianic movements in contemporary Muslim South Asia. Global Media Publications. ISBN 9788188869282. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Passing mention
19: Indian Journal of Secularism: IJS : a Journal of Centre for Study of Society & Secularism. The Centre. 2005. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Unreliable self published source
20: Muhammad, Nur (2000). The Deendar Anjuman. Nur Muhammad. p. 64. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Unreliable self published source
21: Abidin, Danial Zainal (2007). Islam the Misunderstood Religion. PTS Millennia. p. 93. ISBN 9789833604807. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Self published unreliable source
22: Unal, Ali; Gultekin, Harun (2013). The Prophet Promised in World Scriptures. Tughra Books. ISBN 9781597848237. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Passing mention irrelevant to notability of the book or the subject.
23: Sikand, Yoginder (2004). Muslims in India Since 1947: Islamic Perspectives on Inter-Faith Relations. Routledge. ISBN 9781134378258. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
Passing mention irrelevant to any notability of the book or subject.
Aman.kumar.goel (talk) 13:09, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
reference 1 dead link has been repaired, see here, https://haryanaexpress.in/2019/04/09/in-the-field-of-sanskrit/ Lazy-restless 15:59, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Few details about a non-notable author does not actually help. Subject still fails WP:NBOOK. Aman.kumar.goel (talk) 16:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Another dead link repaired. https://mhrd.gov.in/sites/upload_files/mhrd/files/PR_PRESIDENT_AWARD_2018.pdf Lazy-restless 01:30, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Some new references has been added, check it out. Going to add more. The book is highly notable: It is the most used, most renowned, most quoted and most controversial book about hindu-muslim unity in India, the book and its trilogy is recognised the highestly used reference about scriptural similarity between hindus and muslims, also the writer, he is one of the high-profile leading indian public scholar and educator of sanskrit language. But trying to show it as not notable is a religius sectarian attempt of indian wiki users. If there is disagreement with the title,then I propose to change myself the title as "Muhammad and hindu scriptures" like Muhammad and the Bible article, and then I will rewrite the article with additional references with other related biblical sources. Lazy-restless 01:32, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete: Non-notable book written by a non-notable author. --RaviC (talk) 10:25, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per evaluation of sources posted above. Tessaracter (talk) 11:04, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Google scolar link https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=%22Kalki+Avatar+and+Muhammad&btnG=#d=gs_qabs&u=%23p%3DYKA4u5EnKz4J. New references:
Lazy-restless 13:09, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete. Fails WP:SIGCOV and WP:NBOOK.4meter4 (talk) 18:57, 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:N",
"WP:GNG",
"Dainik Bhaskar",
"WP:SIGCOV",
"Dainik Tribune",
"Muhammad and the Bible",
"WP:NBOOK",
"Kalki Avatar and Muhammad (book)",
"Aaj Tak",
"WP:FRINGE",
"Dainik Jagran"
] |
62,110,916 |
Category:Project-Class Catalonia pages
|
[] |
|
62,110,919 |
Category:Draft-Class Catalonia pages
|
[] |
|
62,110,937 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Commander Cain
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was redirect to List of Battlestar Galactica characters. (non-admin closure) Natg 19 (talk) 07:09, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Commander Cain===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
No evidence this passes WP:NFICTION/WP:GNG. BEFORE shows only primary sources/mentions in passing. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 10:58, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 10:58, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Merge/redirect to List of Battlestar Galactica characters as non-notable, per nom.ZXCVBNM (TALK) 17:19, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete or redirect - Non-notable topic. TTN (talk) 13:54, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect to List of Battlestar Galactica characters. Fails WP:GNG and WP:NFICTION. Onel5969 TT me 02:15, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:NFICTION",
"List of Battlestar Galactica characters",
"Commander Cain",
"WP:GNG"
] |
62,110,969 |
File:JDA Dijon logo.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"JDA Dijon Basket"
] |
62,110,978 |
Category:Asian Baseball Cup
|
[] |
|
62,110,980 |
Acacia grandifolia
|
Acacia grandifolia is a tree belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Juliflorae that is native to north-eastern Australia. It is listed as vulnerable according to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.
==Description==
The tree typically grows to a maximum height of . It has dark brown coloured bark that is deeply furrowed. The acutely angular and stout branchlets are densely covered in soft velvety grey hairs. Like most species of Acacia it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The evergreen asymmetrically elliptic phyllodes are more or less straight with a length of and a width of . The phyllodes are stiff and coriaceous and have three to four yellowish and prominent main nerves running together near the base. It blooms between July and October It produces cylindrical flower-spikes with a length of followed by seed pods that are constricted between and raised over the seeds The densely haired seed pods have a length of and a width of with longitudinally arranged seeds inside.
==Distribution==
It is endemic to two small areas in the Burnett District of south east Queensland where it is often situated amongst outcrops of sandstone growing in sandy or in shallow, stony soils that have originated from basalt. It is found in hilly terrain of differing slopes and aspects, in gullies, on plains and on hill crests. and grows well in disturbed ground and along roadsides. It occurs in dense stands or as part of gun-tree woodland communities along with Eucalyptus crebra, Corymbia citriodora, Corymbia trachyphloia and Eucalyptus exserta.
|
[
"Corymbia citriodora",
"endemism",
"phyllode",
"Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999",
"vulnerable species",
"Queensland",
"Australia",
"basalt",
"Wide Bay–Burnett",
"seed pod",
"Leslie Pedley",
"Australasian Virtual Herbarium",
"Eucalyptus crebra",
"disturbed ground",
"sandstone",
"Eucalyptus exserta",
"Corymbia trachyphloia",
"Department of the Environment and Energy",
"Acacia",
"List of Acacia species"
] |
62,110,988 |
Stephan von Breuning (librettist)
|
Stephan von Breuning (17 August 1774 – 4 June 1827) was a German civil servant, librettist and Ludwig van Beethoven's lifelong friend, from his childhood in Bonn when receiving music lessons until acting as his executor in Vienna.
== Life ==
Born in Bonn, Breuning was the son of Emanuel Joseph von Breuning and his wife Helene von Breuning, also known as Beethoven's second mother. In 1784, the family made the acquaintance of Ludwig van Beethoven in their home at Bonn. He became a close friend to the family and gave piano lessons to the Breuning children Eleonore and Lorenz.
In 1801, Breuning moved to Vienna where four years later Beethoven's Fidelio was premiered. Besides Joseph Sonnleithner and Georg Friedrich Treitschke, Breuning also contributed to the libretto. In 1806, Beethoven dedicated his violin concerto op. 61 to his friend. Following Beethoven's death in 1827, Breuning assisted in handling affairs of the estate, then died at age 52 a few months later. The plan to publish a Beethoven biography, which Breuning had considered writing in collaboration with Beethoven's childhood friend and Breuning's brother-in-law Franz Gerhard Wegeler and Anton Schindler, could not be realized.
== Family ==
In April, 1808, Breuning married Julie von Vering (1791–1809), the daughter of Beethoven's physician Gerhard von Vering (1755-1823), to whom Beethoven dedicated the piano version of his Violin Concerto. Julie died at age 17, less than a year after their marriage. Around 1812, Breuning began a relationship with Constanze Ruschowitz (1785-86 in Freudenthal, Austrian Silesia, – 5 October 1856 in Vienna), whom he married on 18 February 1817. She had three children:
Gerhard von Breuning,
Helena Juliana Philippina von Breuning (born 17 August 1818),
Mara Magdalena Barbara von Breuning (born 2 April 1821).
|
[
"Austrian Silesia",
"librettist",
"Anton Schindler",
"Helene von Breuning",
"Bruntál",
"Joseph Sonnleithner",
"Ulrich Konrad",
"Ludwig Nohl",
"Ludwig van Beethoven",
"Violin Concerto (Beethoven)",
"Franz Gerhard Wegeler",
"Bonn",
"Georg Friedrich Treitschke",
"Vienna",
"Stephan Ley",
"Martin Staehelin",
"Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians",
"Fidelio",
"Gerhard von Breuning",
"Civil servant",
"Allgemeine deutsche Musikzeitung",
"Rita Steblin"
] |
62,110,995 |
John Pence
|
John Edward Pence is an attorney, American businessman and political advisor who worked as a senior political advisor for President Donald Trump. During Trump's 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns, Pence engaged with Latino voters and advocated for Trump's policies regarding Latin America. He is the son of former Congressman Greg Pence and nephew of former Vice President Mike Pence.
==Early life and education==
John was born in Columbus, Indiana and is the son of Greg Pence, a United States Representative for Indiana's 6th congressional district, and Denise Pence. He is the nephew of Vice President of the United States Mike Pence. Pence has three sibling and attended Columbus North High School.
Pence graduated with a major in the Spanish from the College of William & Mary. During his college career, Pence studied abroad at the National University of La Plata in Argentina, where he observed President of Venezuela Hugo Chávez receive an award and attack the United States while students applauded him. After these experiences, Pence said that he witnessed socialism ruining Latin America.
== Career ==
In August 2016, Pence began working for the Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign. During the presidency of Donald Trump, Pence worked as the deputy executive director of Trump's 2020 presidential campaign. While serving in the position, the Republican National Committee (RNC) paid $37,000 a month to rent an office in Trump Tower for Pence according to CNBC. He also was one of the main advocates for regime change against President Nicolás Maduro, promoting the Trump administration's involvement in the Venezuelan presidential crisis and its support for Juan Guaidó. Pence signed the Madrid Charter, a document drafted by the right-wing Spanish party Vox that describes left-wing groups as enemies of Ibero-America involved in a "criminal project" that are "under the umbrella of the Cuban regime".
In September 2021, Pence was named CEO of ACE Specialties, an American company based in Lafayette, Louisiana that markets merchandise and assists with fundraising for conservative political candidates. John was an attorney at the law firm of Ice Miller LLP, which is one of Indiana’s oldest law firms founded in 1910. On January 6, 2025 he launched Frontline Government Relations with Trump 2024 Senior Advisor Michael Glassner.
== Political positions ==
Pence is a member of the Republican Party. He has been described as having a "populist appeal" with skillful public speaking abilities by the Carroll Daily Times Herald. The Daily Herald Times also wrote that Pence described the Democratic Party as wanting to control Americans lives instead of promoting freedom, with Pence saying that John F. Kennedy would be a Republican in the present day citing Kennedy's "Ask not what your country can do for you" quote, stating the Democratic Party was "not about doing the selfless work".
== Personal life ==
Pence married Giovanna Coia, the cousin of Trump aide Kellyanne Conway, on September 14, 2019, in Atlantic City, New Jersey at the St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church in a ceremony monitored by local law enforcement and the United States Secret Service.
|
[
"The Republic (Columbus, Indiana)",
"United States House of Representatives",
"Indiana University Bloomington",
"La Gaceta (Spain)",
"Kellyanne Conway",
"Charlotte Pence Bond",
"Chicago Sun-Times",
"Columbus North High School",
"Sun-Sentinel",
"List of post–2016 election Donald Trump rallies",
"regime change",
"Juan Guaidó",
"Mike Pence",
"Indiana's 6th congressional district",
"Carroll Daily Times Herald",
"St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church",
"first impeachment of Donald Trump",
"Republican Party (United States)",
"CNBC",
"First presidency of Donald Trump",
"federalism",
"Lafayette, Louisiana",
"Juris Doctor",
"Trump Tower",
"Donald Trump",
"David Bossie",
"Nicaragua",
"National University of La Plata",
"Right-wing politics",
"Columbus, Indiana",
"Indiana University Maurer School of Law",
"CEO",
"Atlantic City, New Jersey",
"The Press of Atlantic City",
"President of Nicaragua",
"Ask not what your country can do for you",
"Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign",
"Corey Lewandowski",
"Latinos for Trump",
"WP:INFONAT",
"Latin America",
"Vox (political party)",
"Bachelor of Arts",
"New York University Stern School of Business",
"Daniel Ortega",
"El Confidencial",
"College of William & Mary",
"Latino vote",
"Republican National Committee",
"Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign",
"populist",
"Democratic Party (United States)",
"KPEL-FM",
"Master of Business Administration",
"public speaking",
"Mother Jones (magazine)",
"United States Secret Service",
"limited government",
"Nicolás Maduro",
"Ibero-America",
"English language",
"Fox News",
"Conservatism",
"Hugo Chávez",
"Twelve (publisher)",
"socialism",
"Greg Pence",
"Orlando Sentinel",
"free market",
"Madrid Charter",
"The Washington Post",
"President of Venezuela",
"Omarosa Manigault Newman",
"John F. Kennedy",
"Tennessee Star",
"Venezuelan presidential crisis",
"New York University",
"Let Trump Be Trump"
] |
62,110,999 |
Jigin
|
{{Infobox settlement
|name = Jigin
|native_name =
|other_name = Jigen
|nickname =
|settlement_type = Township
|motto =
|image_skyline =
|imagesize =
|image_caption =
|image_map =
|mapsize =
|map_caption =
|image_map1 =
|mapsize1 =
|pushpin_map = China Xinjiang Southern
|pushpin_label_position = right
|pushpin_mapsize =
|pushpin_map_caption = Location of the township
|subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = People's Republic of China
|subdivision_type1 = Autonomous region
|subdivision_name1 = Xinjiang
|subdivision_type2 = Prefecture
|subdivision_name2 = Kizilsu
|subdivision_type3 =County
|subdivision_name3 =Ulugqat (Wuqia)
|government_footnotes =
|government_type =
|leader_title =
|leader_name =
|established_title =
|established_date =
|seat_type = Seat
|seat = Saz Village (Sazi; )
|area_magnitude =
|unit_pref = metric
|area_footnotes =
|population_note =
|population_total = 2,467
|population_density_km2 = auto
|demographics_type2 = Ethnic groups
|demographics2_title1 = Major ethnic groups
|demographics2_info1 = Kyrgyz Township (جىغىن يېزىسى / جىعىن ايىلى / Jigen'''
==Geography==
Jigin Township is located 120 kilometers west of the county seat Wuqia Town and 25 kilometers away east of Arkaxtam Port on the China–Kyrgyzstan border. It is adjacent to Ulugqat Township in the east and Oksalur Township in the south, and borders with the Kyrgyz Republic in the northwest with a boundary line of 108 kilometers. marked by the "Western Pole of China" monument.
==Politics and Government==
===Settlements===
The township has 4 administration villages and 4 unincorporated villages under its jurisdiction.
Saqal Village (Sahalecun) (, , )
Saz Village (Sazicun) (, , )
Simhana is Kyrgyz for 'phone room' (). Simhana is west of the Ulugqat (Wuqia) county seat on the southern bank of the Kezi River. Simhama is considered to be the westernmost village of China, located near Erkeshtam, Kyrgyzstan.
Qaraterek (Halatieliekecun) (, , )
===CCP Party Secretaries===
Zhong Zi'ou (), 2017
==Demographics==
, the population of Jigin was 99.6% Kyrgyz.
|
[
"Kezi River",
"Xi Jinping",
"Counties of China",
"Ulugqat County",
"Xinjiang People's Press",
"unincorporated village",
"Xinhua News Agency",
"Oksalur",
"China News Service",
"National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency",
"List of extreme points of China",
"Townships of China",
"Kyrgyz people",
"zh:国家图书馆出版社",
"China",
"Cultural Revolution",
"annual precipitation",
"China Standard Time",
"China–Kyrgyzstan border",
"Ulugqat Township",
"Erkeshtam",
"Kyrgyz language",
"Kyrgyzstan",
"Autonomous regions of China",
"List of ethnic groups in China",
"Wuqia Town",
"Xinjiang",
"sea level",
"Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture",
"mountain pass",
"Villages of China",
"Google Cache",
"Ürümqi",
"Prefectures of China",
"Beijing",
"Internet Archive",
"China Daily"
] |
62,111,001 |
Jessa Dillow Crisp
|
Jessa Dillow Crisp (born 1988) is a survivor of and an advocate against human trafficking for the sex industry.
==Childhood==
Jessa Dillow Crisp was sexually abused by family members since the age of 10. They then forced her to be a model for child pornographers. After that her family trafficked her to pimps and pedophiles in the surrounding neighborhoods. Crisp says that the abuse also took place in local brothels and hotels. She claims that she was trafficked domestically in Canada but also across the border in the USA.
She described the impact it had on her in the following way: I was scared to reach out for help and growing up the message that was branded on my heart was the idea that I had no worth, I was shameful, and all I was good for was sex. Crisp also stated that police officers were among her abusers and that she was threatened with being put in jail if she ever spoke out about what was happening to her.
==Escape from trafficking==
Crisp planned her escape for months. In 2010, she finally managed to escape with the help of a woman who ran a safe house in the US. Having entered the United States on a tourist Visa, Crisp was forced to leave again after 6 months. She subsequently entered a safe house in Vancouver.
It was there that she befriended a disguised female pimp. This pimp proceeded to traffic her out during the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. Crisp managed to escape once again to the same safe house she entered the first time when in the US. The head of the safe house suggested that Crisp should enroll in college. She was first hesitant and believed that it wouldn't be possible for her to be accepted or go through college as she hadn't been able to attend school at all in her childhood. She was then told by the head of the safe house, "If you can read you can learn anything." Crisp diligently started to study hard in order to apply for college. She managed to get accepted into Nazarene Bible College and was thus able to obtain a student visa, which made it possible for her to stay in the US.
==Education==
Crisp graduated summa cum laude with a 4.0 GPA BA in Clinical Counseling in 2016. She was the valedictorian of her class. She is continuing her education in an MA program for Clinical Mental Health Counseling and is planning on obtaining a PhD in Clinical Psychology with a specialisation in trauma recovery. She is expected to graduate with a MA in May 2020.
==Activism==
Crisp is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Bridge Hope Now since 2011. The organisation provides trainings for organisations on what human trafficking is, how to spot it and how to combat it. Bridge Hope Now is also developing a smart phone app to coordinate resources for survivors or networks that victims can use to exit the sex industry. The organisation also helps survivors thrive in their lives after human trafficking through a mentorship program and a holiday program (including Christmas gifts and programs for survivors).
Crisp is a public speaker on the topic of human trafficking. She has given a talk for the US Air Force Academy National Character and Leadership Symposium in 2018. Crisp has aside from that spoken at several conferences on human trafficking and worked with anti- human trafficking organisations both in the US and Europe.
==Personal life==
Jessa Dillow Crisp was adopted by Jody and Linda Dillow at age 21. The married couple was on the board of the safe house in the US where Jessa had found refuge. Crisp married John Crisp in 2015. Her husband is a photographer and PhD student. They both live in Denver, Colorado.
|
[
"Colorado",
"US Air Force Academy",
"Nazarene Bible College",
"The New Zealand Herald",
"Denver"
] |
62,111,013 |
Second Working Cabinet
|
Second Working Cabinet may refer to:
Second Working Cabinet (Sukarno)
Second Working Cabinet (Joko Widodo)
|
[
"Second Working Cabinet (Sukarno)",
"Second Working Cabinet (Joko Widodo)"
] |
62,111,017 |
File:Hellaro film poster.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,111,028 |
File:Kataja Basket 2019 logo.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"Kataja BC"
] |
62,111,032 |
Cabinet of Joko Widodo
|
Cabinet of Joko Widodo may refer to:
Working Cabinet (2014–2019)
Onward Indonesia Cabinet
|
[
"Working Cabinet (2014–2019)",
"Onward Indonesia Cabinet"
] |
62,111,035 |
First Working Cabinet
|
The First Working Cabinet () was an Indonesian cabinet that served from 10 July 1959 until 18 February 1960, when President Sukarno reshuffled it.
==Composition==
===Cabinet Leadership===
Prime Minister: Sukarno
Deputy Prime Minister: Djuanda Kartawidjaja
===Cabinet Members===
Minister of Defense and Security : Lt. Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution
Minister of Foreign Affairs: Subandrio
Minister of Finance: Djuanda
Minister of Production: Col. Suprajogi
Minister of Distribution: Johannes Leimena
Minister of Public Prosperity: Muljadi Djojomartono
Minister of Home Affairs and Autonomy: Ipik Gandamana
Minister of Social and Cultural Affairs: Muhammad Yamin
===Ex Officio Ministers of State===
Minister/Army Chief of Staff: Lt. Gen. A. H. Nasution
Minister/Air Force Chief of Staff: Air Marshal S. Surjadarma
Minister/Navy Chief of Staff: Captain R. E. Martadinata
Minister/National Police Chief of Staff: Chief Commissioner Said Sukanto Tjokroatmodjo
Attorney General ad-interim: Gatot Taroenamihardja
Minister/Vice Chairman of the Supreme Advisory Council: Ruslan Abdulgani
Minister/Chairman of the National Planning Council: Muhammad Yamin
==Junior Ministers==
===First Ministerial Section===
Junior Minister of Information: Maladi
Junior Minister of People's Mobilization: Soedjono and Sudjono (joint ministers)
Junior Minister of Relations with the Legislature: W. J. Rumambi
Junior Minister of Relations with Religious Scholars: Fatah Jasin
Junior Minister of Defense: Maj. Gen. Hidajat
Junior Minister of Justice: Sahardjo
Junior Minister of Police: Chief Commissioner Said Sukanto Tjokroatmodjo
Junior Minister of Veteran Affairs: Col. Sambas Atmadinata
===Financial Section===
Junior Minister of Finance: Notohamiprodjo
===Production Affairs===
Junior Minister of Agriculture: Col. Azis Saleh
Junior Minister of Public Works and Power: Sardjono Dipokusumo
Junior Minister of Labor: Ahem Erningpradja
===Distribution Section===
Junior Minister of Maritime Transportation: Abdul Mutalib Danuningrat
Junior Minister of Land Transportation and Post, Telegraph and Telephones: Maj. Gen. Djatikoesoemo
Junior Minister of Air Transportation: Colonel R. Iskandar
Junior Minister of Trade: Arifin Harahap
===Development Section===
Junior Minister of People's Industry: Soeharto Sastrosoeyoso
Junior Minister of Basic Industries and Mining: Chairul Saleh
Junior Minister of Agrarian Affairs: Sadjarwo Djarwonagoro
Junior Minister of Transmigration, Cooperatives & Development of Village Communities: Achmadi
===Public Welfare Section===
Junior Minister of Welfare: Colonel Satrio
Junior Minister of Religion: Wahib Wahab
Junior Minister of Social Affairs: Muljadi Djojomartono
===Social & Cultural Section===
Junior Minister of Education & Culture: Prijono
==Changes==
Johannes Leimena was appointed Deputy First Minister on 27 July 1959. He retained his job as Distribution Minister
On 30 July 1959, the Social-Cultural Section was abolished. The Junior Minister of Education & Culture was moved to the First Ministerial Section. Muhammad Yamin was appointed Chairman of the National Planning Agency and became an ex officio minister.
on 15 August, Sultan Hamengkubuwana IX was appointed Minister/Chairman of the State Apparatus Oversight Agency and Roeslan Abdulgani became acting Chairman of the Supreme Advisory council and ex officio minister.
On 22 September 1956, Attorney General ad-interim Gatot Tarunamihardja was replaced by Zainal Abidin.
On 15 December 1959, Junior Minister of Police Said Sukanto Tjokroatmodjo was replaced by Chief Commissioner Soekarno Djojonegoro.
|
[
"Muhammad Yamin",
"List of Prime Ministers of Indonesia",
"Djuanda",
"Abdul Azis Saleh",
"Maladi",
"Dadang Suprayogi",
"Chairul Saleh",
"Abdul Haris Nasution",
"Ruslan Abdulgani",
"Sahardjo",
"Transmigration program",
"Satrio",
"Muljadi Djojomartono",
"Djatikoesoemo",
"Prijono",
"Hamengkubuwana IX",
"Subandrio",
"Djuanda Cabinet",
"Ipik Gandamana",
"Sukarno",
"Johannes Leimena",
"Soerjadi Soerjadarma",
"Soeharto Sastrosoeyoso",
"Sadjarwo Djarwonagoro",
"R. E. Martadinata",
"Second Working Cabinet (Sukarno)",
"Said Soekanto Tjokrodiatmodjo",
"Wahib Wahab",
"Gatot Taroenamihardja",
"Fatah Jasin"
] |
62,111,067 |
Working Cabinet (Sukarno)
|
Sukarno's Working Cabinet may refer to:
First Working Cabinet (Sukarno)
Second Working Cabinet (Sukarno)
Third Working Cabinet
Fourth Working Cabinet
|
[
"Second Working Cabinet (Sukarno)",
"Fourth Working Cabinet",
"Third Working Cabinet",
"First Working Cabinet (Sukarno)"
] |
62,111,071 |
DEL48
|
DEL48 (read D.E.L. Forty-Eight) was an Indian idol group whose name is derived from its based city in New Delhi, India. They are the ninth international sister group of AKB48, after Indonesia's JKT48, China's SNH48 (former), Thailand's BNK48, Philippines's MNL48, China's AKB48 Team SH, Taiwan's AKB48 Team TP, Vietnam's SGO48 (disbanded), and Thailand's CGM48. Adopting the concept of "idols you can meet". Formed in 2019, the group went on a hiatus in October 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and later disbanded in July 2022.
== History ==
=== 2018: Planning of MUM48 ===
During a livestream in December 2017, AKB48's general manager Yui Yokoyama announced the formation of MUM48, AKB48's supposed 8th sister group based in Mumbai, India. The group will be operated by Rashmi Raj Media Pvt. Ltd., a company by producer Rashmi Sharma. An event was held to promote the group, with "girls power" and "women empowerment" as the theme of the group. Audition was soon held, but stopped abruptly in July 2018; the website became inaccessible and their social media platform stopped posting.
=== 2019: Creation of DEL48 and MUB48 ===
On 19 June 2019, an event was held to announce the formation of DEL48 and MUB48. Both groups will be managed by AKS and YKBK48 Entertainment Pvt. ltd., a company headquartered in Gurgaon, with Yoshiya Kato serving as chairman and Rohit Bakshi as CEO of the company. The groups would be an addition to the AKB48 overseas sister group, following JKT48, BNK48, MNL48, AKB48 Team SH, AKB48 Team TP, SGO48, and CGM48. The groups took their name from the proposed base location of New Delhi and Mumbai, India. The groups are based on the concept of 'idols with whom fans can meet' and will be involved in the entertainment industry including theater performance, concert, other entertainment events, music record release, movies, media appearance, etc. Following the announcement, DEL48 launched its own YouTube channel and announced that it would be accepting applications from girls aged between 12 and 20. The first round of the first DEL48 audition took place from 19th to 31st July 2019, attracting more than 10,000 applicants.
Ahead of AKB48's performance on NHK's 2019 Kouhaku Uta Gassen, it was announced the performance will also include a member of DEL48. On 30 December 2019, Glory is introduced in AKB48's theater in Tokyo, becoming the first member to be revealed. The remaining 21 members were announced the next day, while Glory performed with AKB48 Group to sing Koi Suru Fortune Cookie. The group was confirmed to debut in Spring 2020 by Glory in a Japanese interview.
=== 2020–2022: Debut plans, hiatus, and disbandment ===
The plan to debut the group in early 2020 was postponed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The group released its Overture in March 2020, followed by the release of its members' official Instagram and TikTok page. An official TikTok page for the group was also opened, featuring the members dancing to AKB48 and BNK48's Koi Suru Fortune Cookie and the latter's High Tension. The group later began a weekly upload on their Instagram and YouTube page with each members having their own contents.
In May 2020, DEL48 members, Reyna, Glory and Beanie, were featured alongside their sister groupmates in AKB48's performance on One Love Asia, an online charity concert organized by WebTVAsia and YouTube as part of UNICEF ASIA's #Reimagine global campaign to raise funds for children and families affected by the pandemic.
In early October 2020, DEL48 members stopped posting on the group's official Instagram page and reopened their personal accounts, leading to rumors about disbandment. DEL48's producer, Deepak Nandal, later confirmed that YKBK48 Entertainment had terminated its members' contract. He also confirmed the group have recorded its debut music video, an Indian version of Flying Get. However, on 16 October 2020, DEL48 issued an official statement confirming the group is on indefinite suspension with the possibility of coming back in the future.
On 13 July 2022, it was announced YKBK48 Entertainment Pvt. Ltd. will be closing up its operation, officially ending DEL48 and MUB48.
==Members==
On 30 December 2019, the first generation of the group was announced, consisting of 22 members.
|
[
"SGO48",
"CGM48",
"teen pop",
"Yui Yokoyama",
"AKB48 Team TP",
"Mumbai",
"High Tension (song)",
"COVID-19 pandemic",
"Hindustan Times",
"Japanese idol",
"TikTok",
"Gurgaon",
"AKB48 Team SH",
"Yoshiya Kato",
"J-pop",
"BNK48",
"Instagram",
"Vernalossom",
"MNL48",
"Rohit Bakshi (entrepreneur)",
"UNICEF",
"Flying Get",
"Benefit concert",
"Koi Suru Fortune Cookie",
"Indian pop",
"Overture",
"Kōhaku Uta Gassen",
"AKB48 Group",
"AKB48",
"SNH48",
"bubblegum pop",
"Theatre",
"JKT48"
] |
62,111,078 |
List of television series and films based on IDW Publishing publications
|
Below is a list of television series and feature films based on characters and concepts that have appeared in IDW Publishing publications, including its various imprints. This list includes live action and animated television series and films.
==Television==
===Live-action===
===Web series===
===Pilots===
===Animated series===
===From IDW Imprints===
===Top Shelf Productions===
==Film==
===Live-action===
===Animated===
==Reception==
===Box office===
===Critical and public reception===
|
[
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012 TV series)",
"4kids Entertainment",
"MTV",
"Tatsunoko Production",
"Popeye (film)",
"Shiver Me Timbers (2025 film)",
"MTV Animation",
"Ghost House Pictures",
"RKO Pictures",
"IDW Publishing",
"30 Days of Night (film)",
"CBS",
"TI Media",
"TMNT (film)",
"Hulu",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Disney Junior",
"SuperFuckers",
"DuckTales (1987 TV series)",
"The Crow: Salvation",
"Boom! Kids",
"The Crow: City of Angels",
"DNA Films",
"Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome",
"Gladstone Publishing",
"Usagi Yojimbo",
"Netflix",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"Jeff Most",
"PolyGram Filmed Entertainment",
"WildBrain Spark",
"Alliance Atlantis",
"The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (film)",
"The Rocketeer (film)",
"Fearnet",
"Box Office Mojo",
"Mutant Turtles: Superman Legend",
"The Crow: Stairway to Heaven",
"The New Adventures of Speed Racer",
"Netflix Animation",
"Syfy",
"Fuji TV",
"Popeye Meets the Man Who Hated Laughter",
"Tsuburaya Productions",
"Nickelodeon Animation Studios",
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TV series)",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows",
"Knockabout Comics",
"Remains (film)",
"The Weinstein Company",
"Davis Entertainment",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987 TV series)",
"Disney+",
"Cineflix",
"Orange Sky Golden Harvest",
"Popeye's Revenge",
"Point Grey Pictures",
"Popeye the Sailor (TV series)",
"WildStorm",
"Mainframe Studios",
"Surfside Girls",
"Halas and Batchelor",
"Larry Harmon Pictures",
"Cinergi Pictures",
"Heavy Metal (magazine)",
"Village Roadshow Pictures",
"IDW Entertainment",
"4Kids Entertainment",
"Dick Tracy's Dilemma",
"Disney Comics (publishing)",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990 film)",
"DC Comics",
"V Wars",
"30 Days of Night: Dust to Dust",
"Hollywood Pictures",
"Dell Comics",
"Imagi Animation Studios",
"Uncle Scrooge",
"Animation Collective",
"Silver Screen Partners",
"Disney Television Animation",
"Dredd",
"Popeye and Son",
"Reliance Entertainment",
"Dick Tracy (TV series)",
"First Comics",
"Mirage Enterprises",
"Gemstone Publishing",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III",
"IM Global",
"Saban Entertainment",
"The All New Popeye Hour",
"United Artists",
"American Broadcasting Company",
"Lionsgate Television",
"Gaumont Animation",
"Nickelodeon Animation Studio",
"From Hell (film)",
"DIC Entertainment",
"DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp",
"Alibaba Pictures",
"Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles",
"America's Best Comics",
"Frederator Studios",
"Top Shelf Productions",
"Funimation",
"30 Days of Night: Dark Days",
"20th Century Studios",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles",
"Judge Dredd (film)",
"Rembrandt Films",
"Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie",
"Samurai Rabbit: The Usagi Chronicles",
"The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume III: Century",
"Shueisha",
"DreamWorks Television",
"Jon Sable",
"Wynonna Earp (TV series)",
"Tank Girl (film)",
"Mirage Studios",
"30 Days of Night: Blood Trails",
"Locke & Key (TV series)",
"Touchstone Pictures",
"Filmation",
"October Faction (TV series)",
"List of IDW Publishing publications",
"YouTube",
"The Crow (1994 film)",
"Turtles Forever",
"Amazon Prime",
"Popeye",
"The Dick Tracy Show",
"Intermedia (production company)",
"The Crow (2024 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"20th Century Fox",
"The Rocketeer (TV series)",
"Cartoon Hangover",
"Locke & Key (TV pilot)",
"CinemaScore",
"The Crow",
"Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation",
"Detroit Mirror",
"Fusosha Publishing",
"Miramax",
"Popeye the Sailor",
"Disneytoon Studios",
"Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy",
"Endeavor (company)",
"Grimjack",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem",
"Apple TV+",
"Asahi Sonorama",
"Rebellion Developments",
"Rough Draft Studios",
"Dimension Films",
"Speed Racer (film)",
"Hanna-Barbera",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014 film)",
"Dong Woo Animation",
"Famous Studios",
"Wild Canary Animation",
"Sable (TV series)",
"New Line Cinema",
"Nicktoons (American TV channel)",
"Essex County (TV series)",
"Platinum Dunes",
"Taft Broadcasting",
"Image Comics",
"Speed Racer",
"The Crow: Wicked Prayer",
"Paramount+",
"Edward R. Pressman",
"Stage 6 Films",
"Russo brothers",
"Sony Pictures Releasing",
"Silver Pictures",
"Speed Racer: The Next Generation",
"Dark Horse Entertainment",
"Gravitas Ventures",
"The Maxx",
"Paramount Home Entertainment",
"Fox Broadcasting Company",
"Atomic Monster",
"King Features Syndicate",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze",
"Dick Tracy (1990 film)",
"Popeye the Slayer Man",
"Alliance Films",
"From Hell",
"Amblin Television",
"Mach GoGoGo (1997 anime series)",
"Paramount Animation",
"Nickelodeon",
"Fandango Media",
"Nickelodeon Movies",
"TV Tokyo",
"Metacritic",
"Sony Pictures Home Entertainment",
"Dick Tracy (1945 film)",
"Dark Horse Comics",
"Canadian Broadcasting Corporation",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 TV series)",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"DuckTales (2017 TV series)",
"Fred Wolf Films",
"Dick Tracy vs. Cueball"
] |
62,111,086 |
Category:Proposed infrastructure in Telangana
|
[] |
|
62,111,089 |
Bengt Hesselman
|
{{Infobox academic
| image = Bengt_Hesselman.png
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| birth_date =
| birth_place = Stockholm, Sweden or Å, Sweden
==Early life==
Hesselman was born either in Stockholm or in Å, Östergötland, on 21 December 1875. His parents were the factory owner Bror August Hesselman and Marie Louise Hesselman, née Åberg. He had several brothers, including the botanist Henrik Hesselman and the civil engineer Jonas Hesselman.
==Education and academic career==
He passed his maturity examination (mogenhetsexamen) in Stockholm in 1893 and became a student at Uppsala University in the same year. In 1902 he defended his doctoral thesis on some phonological features of East Swedish dialects (Östsvenska mål, spoken in parts of Finland and historically in parts of Estonia). He continued his studies on Swedish regional dialects, and published several books on dialect boundaries in Swedish, and on the historical development of Swedish vowel sounds.
In the 1910s he started publishing research on place names and names of plants, and he broadened his studies to involve Scandinavian languages other than Swedish. He was appointed Professor of Scandinavian languages at the University of Gothenburg in 1914, but only stayed there until 1919 when he became Professor of Scandinavian languages at Uppsala University.
He was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1931, of the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities in 1933, and of the Swedish Academy in 1935.
His scholarly production includes works on phonological history, the emergence of Standard Swedish, and a large work on Scandinavian language history where the first part, Omljud och brytning i de nordiska språken was published in 1945, and later parts in 1948, 1952 and posthumously in 1953.
==Personal life==
Hesselman married Märta Charlotta von Post in 1906. He died in Uppsala on 6 April 1952, and is buried at Uppsala old cemetery.
|
[
"Svenskt biografiskt lexikon",
"Jonas Hesselman",
"Uppsala old cemetery",
"Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences",
"Uppsala",
"Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities",
"Henrik Hesselman",
"University of Gothenburg",
"Studentexamen",
"dialect boundaries",
"List of members of the Swedish Academy",
"Henry Olsson",
"Östergötland",
"Å, Sweden",
"Uppsala University",
"Scandinavian languages",
"Linguistics",
"Standard Swedish",
"Axel Kock",
"Philology",
"Swedish Academy",
"Stockholm"
] |
62,111,094 |
Category:Proposed infrastructure in Andhra Pradesh
|
[] |
|
62,111,097 |
Wikipedia:Main Page history/2019 October 20
|
Welcome to Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit.
5,954,960 articles in English
Arts
Biography
Geography
History
Mathematics
Science
Society
Technology
All portals
Today's featured picture
Other areas of Wikipedia
Community portal – Bulletin board, projects, resources and activities covering a wide range of Wikipedia areas.
Help desk – Ask questions about using Wikipedia.
Local embassy – For Wikipedia-related communication in languages other than English.
Reference desk – Serving as virtual librarians, Wikipedia volunteers tackle your questions on a wide range of subjects.
Site news – Announcements, updates, articles and press releases on Wikipedia and the Wikimedia Foundation.
Village pump – For discussions about Wikipedia itself, including areas for technical issues and policies.
Wikipedia's sister projects
Wikipedia is hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization that also hosts a range of other projects:
[//commons.wikimedia.org/ Commons] Free media repository
[//mediawiki.org/ MediaWiki] Wiki software development
[//meta.wikimedia.org/ Meta-Wiki] Wikimedia project coordination
[//en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] Free textbooks and manuals
[//www.wikidata.org/ Wikidata] Free knowledge base
[//en.wikinews.org/ Wikinews] Free-content news
[//en.wikiquote.org/ Wikiquote] Collection of quotations
[//en.wikisource.org/ Wikisource] Free-content library
[//species.wikimedia.org/ Wikispecies] Directory of species
[//en.wikiversity.org/ Wikiversity] Free learning materials and activities
[//en.wikivoyage.org/ Wikivoyage] Free travel guide
[//en.wiktionary.org/ Wiktionary] Dictionary and thesaurus
Wikipedia languages
This Wikipedia is written in English. Started in 2001 (2001), it currently contains 5,954,960 articles.
Many other Wikipedias are available; some of the largest are listed below.
More than 1,000,000 articles:
Deutsch
Español
Français
Italiano
Nederlands
日本語
Polski
Português
Русский
Svenska
Tiếng Việt
中文
More than 250,000 articles:
العربية
Bahasa Indonesia
Bahasa Melayu
Български
Català
Čeština
Dansk
Esperanto
Euskara
فارسی
עברית
한국어
Magyar
Norsk Bokmål
Română
Srpski
Srpskohrvatski
Suomi
Türkçe
Українська
More than 50,000 articles:
Bosanski
Eesti
Ελληνικά
English (Simple English)
Galego
Hrvatski
Latviešu
Lietuvių
മലയാളം
Norsk nynorsk
Slovenčina
Slovenščina
ไทย
Complete list of Wikipedias
__NOTOC____NOEDITSECTION__
|
[
"Vajrayana",
"Pragmatic Sanction of 1713",
"Brigid Kosgei",
"country music",
"Hurricane Patricia",
"Gulf of Tehuantepec",
"Football helmet",
"Typhoon Tip",
"2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria",
"Pope Pius XII",
"Radio drama",
"Abhijit Banerjee",
"Judd Trump",
"1951",
"Gelug",
"Coterel gang",
"Lee Eun-soo",
"encyclopedia",
"Marathon world record progression",
"Joe Perry (snooker player)",
"Wikipedia",
"mail:daily-article-l",
"general officer",
"Ralph d'Escures",
"Tibet",
"James Chadwick",
"Template talk:Did you know",
"October 19",
"Johnny Bright",
"Michael Kremer",
"Fred Keenor",
"National Collegiate Athletic Association",
"Patrick Day",
"2015 Pacific hurricane season",
"Distemper (paint)",
"HIV/AIDS in China",
"Metropolitan Museum of Art",
"Chen Liting",
"Sarma (Tibetan Buddhism)",
"gospel music",
"Brexit negotiations in 2019",
"Summi Pontificatus",
"meta:List of Wikipedias",
"2019 Ecuadorian protests",
"trial of Catalonia independence leaders",
"landfall",
"Battle of Sirte (2011)",
"Jalisco",
"college football",
"Mahayana",
"Shuping Wang",
"List of historical anniversaries",
"Gujarati language",
"Rambha Gandhi",
"2019 Chicago Marathon",
"Dromtön",
"WBCE",
"encyclical",
"Deaths in 2019",
"tropical cyclone",
"Maria Theresa",
"1939",
"2019 Hong Kong protests",
"Battle of Neville's Cross",
"Muammar Gaddafi",
"SSHS",
"Esther Duflo",
"Wikimedia Foundation",
"Habsburg Monarchy",
"Sulli",
"atmospheric pressure",
"Sumatra",
"Anti-Gaddafi forces",
"free content",
"Death of Muammar Gaddafi",
"Kadam (Tibetan Buddhism)",
"foundationsite:our-work/wikimedia-projects/",
"Greatest Bengali of all time",
"English language",
"Johnny Bright incident",
"Impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump",
"The Faggots & Their Friends Between Revolutions",
"Libyan Civil War (2011)",
"1740",
"Elijah Cummings",
"Tibetan Buddhism",
"Meteorological history of Hurricane Patricia",
"maximum sustained wind",
"October 21",
"Cuixmala",
"Leah Bracknell",
"Anke Fuchs",
"October 20",
"Mark Hurd",
"Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences",
"South Beach–Franklin Delano Roosevelt Boardwalk",
"Franz Halder",
"2011",
"Bengalis",
"Atiśa",
"National Hurricane Center",
"Lenín Moreno",
"2019 China Championship",
"Srivijaya",
"Children's literature"
] |
62,111,115 |
Athletics at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games – Men's 1500 metres
|
The men's 1500 metres event at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games was held on 18 and 22 July at the Meadowbank Stadium in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was the first time that the metric distance was contested at the Games, replacing the mile.
==Medallists==
==Results==
===Heats===
====Qualification for final====
The first 4 in each heat (Q) qualified directly for the final.
===Final===
|
[
"Muhammed Younis",
"Athletics at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games – Men's 1500 metres",
"John Whetton",
"Dick Quax",
"Meadowbank Stadium",
"Peter Njera",
"Edinburgh",
"Peter Stewart (athlete)",
"Abdul Karim (athlete)",
"Richard Nandolo",
"Dandison Moore",
"John Kirkbride (athlete)",
"Norman Morrison (athlete)",
"David Mungai (sprinter)",
"Benson Mulomba",
"List of Commonwealth Games records in athletics",
"Bob Maplestone",
"Brendan Foster",
"Bernard Banda",
"Athletics at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games",
"Bill Smart",
"1500 metres",
"Athletics at the 1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games – Men's 1 mile",
"Norm Trerise",
"Dick Tayler",
"Keith Falla",
"Ben Jipcho",
"Jaiye Abidoye",
"Kipchoge Keino",
"Ergas Leps",
"Chris Fisher (athlete)",
"Gwynn Davis",
"Phillip Thomas (athlete)",
"Ian McCafferty"
] |
62,111,116 |
Paterson, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Paterson
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 157
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Paterson had a population of 157 people.
The North Coast railway line enters the locality from the south-east (Theebine) and exits to the north-east (Gootchie). The locality is served by the Paterson railway station ().
Gundiah State Forest is in the north of the locality. Apart from this protected area, the land use is predominantly grazing on native vegetation with some plantation forestry and some crop growing. Local residents began lobbying for a railway siding on Mr Paterson's property in 1890 to avoid having to travel miles to the nearest stations.
== Demographics ==
In the , Paterson had a population of 148 people.
In the , Paterson had a population of 157 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Paterson. The nearest government secondary schools are Gundiah State School in neighbouring Gundiah to the north and Theebine State School in neighbouring Theebine to the south. The nearest government secondary schools are James Nash State High School (to Year 12) in Gympie to the south-east, Kilkivan State School (to Year 10) in Kilkivan to the south-west, and Maryborough State High School (to Year 12) in Maryborough to the north-east.
|
[
"Gundiah, Queensland",
"Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"Gundiah",
"Hervey Bay, Queensland",
"Bauple - Woolooga Road",
"Kilkivan, Queensland",
"Theebine, Queensland",
"Theebine",
"Pastoralism",
"The Courier-mail",
"plantation forestry",
"Maryborough, Queensland",
"Queensland Government",
"Mary River (Queensland)",
"Munna Creek, Queensland",
"Electoral district of Gympie",
"Miva, Queensland",
"Gootchie, Queensland",
"Fraser Coast Region",
"Gympie",
"Division of Wide Bay",
"James Nash State High School",
"Maryborough State High School",
"North Coast railway line, Queensland",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)",
"Old Gympie Road",
"AEST"
] |
62,111,120 |
Category:Pages using infobox time zone with unknown parameters
|
[] |
|
62,111,121 |
Butler-Wallin House
|
The Butler-Wallin House, at 1045 E 4500 S, Millcreek, Utah, in Salt Lake County, Utah, was built in 1928–29. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
It is no longer a residence, has been used as a business location since the 1980s.
It is located on the northeast corner of E 4500 S and S 1025 E. in what is now Millcreek, Utah, which was incorporated in 2016.
|
[
"Salt Lake County, Utah",
"Robert W. Butler",
"National Park Service",
"Salt Lake County",
"National Register of Historic Places",
"contributing building",
"Tudor Revival architecture",
"Colonial Revival architecture",
"Millcreek, Utah",
"Alvin G. Wallin"
] |
62,111,129 |
Category:Covered bridges in Mercer County, Pennsylvania
|
Covered bridges in Mercer County, Pennsylvania
|
[
"Mercer County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,133 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Guy In The Jellyland
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was Speedy delete, non-admin closure. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 20:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Guy In The Jellyland===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Fails WP:GNG. Andrew Base (talk) 11:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Film-related deletion discussions. Andrew Base (talk) 11:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete as per nom. Hughesdarren (talk) 11:36, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete, no indication anywhere that this is a real thing, much less a real thing that just isn't notable. (edited to add When this article was nominated for deletion, editor created a new version, Guy in The Jellyland (2018 Series)), which I've nominated for deletion after editor removed speedy tag.) Schazjmd (talk) 15:01, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
----
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
|
[
"Guy in The Jellyland (2018 Series)",
"WP:GNG",
"Guy In The Jellyland"
] |
62,111,148 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Tongue-Tied: How a Tiny String Under the Tongue Impacts Nursing, Speech, Feeding, and More
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was redirect to Ankyloglossia. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 15:46, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Tongue-Tied: How a Tiny String Under the Tongue Impacts Nursing, Speech, Feeding, and More===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Not seeing how this passes Wikipedia:Notability (books). Neither of the reviews appears to meet criterion #1. Edwardx (talk) 11:32, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Literature-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 11:42, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Medicine-related deletion discussions. StarryGrandma (talk) 12:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect this minor book to Ankyloglossia where it could possibly get a one-line mention. Chiswick Chap (talk) 13:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect per above. Tessaracter (talk) 07:39, 21 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.
|
[
"Ankyloglossia",
"Tongue-Tied: How a Tiny String Under the Tongue Impacts Nursing, Speech, Feeding, and More"
] |
62,111,153 |
Template:Adminstats/Huntster
|
[] |
|
62,111,155 |
Regal Princess (ship)
|
Regal Princess may refer to one of the following ships:
, in service with Princess Cruise Line between 1991 and 2007
, commenced service with Princess Cruise Line in 2014
|
[
"Princess Cruise Line"
] |
62,111,157 |
Category:Covered bridges in Bradford County, Pennsylvania
|
Covered bridges in Bradford County, Pennsylvania.
|
[
"Bradford County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,165 |
Edward Chia
|
Edward Chia Bing Hui (; born 17 February 1984)
==Education==
Chia attended National Junior College before graduating from the National University of Singapore in 2009 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics and political science.
Chia co-founded Timbre with Danny Loong in 2005, shortly before starting his undergraduate studies at the National University of Singapore. While studying in NUS, Chia was actively managing the business. National Youth Achievement Award Council, and the co-chair of the National Environment Agency (NEA) work group, which focuses on sustaining the hawker trade.
==Political career==
Chia was fielded in the 2020 general election to contest in the Holland–Bukit Timah GRC on the People's Action Party's ticket against the Singapore Democratic Party. Chia's running mates were Vivian Balakrishnan, Sim Ann, and Christopher de Souza.
Chia was then appointed as the Deputy Chairperson of Manpower Government Parliamentary Committee (GPC) in the 14th Parliament. He also sat on the Finance and Trade and Industry GPC.
Since his appointment as a Member of Parliament for Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, Chia has spoken in Parliament on the need for businesses to find ways to be sustainable and expand to provide more jobs for Singaporeans. As well as on the importance of helping companies upskill their employers and helping businesses grow their business.
In the Zhenghua ward, Chia worked with Vivian Balakrishnan and Liang Eng Hwa to launch a Bukit Panjang Town Jobs and Skills Support Taskforce which helped jobseekers secure employment. He also reached out to Food Bank Singapore to install vending machines to ease food insecurity for households and seniors who live in rental blocks or one- to two-room studio apartments.
==Personal life==
Chia is the eldest of three children born to a businessman and a home-maker.
2014:
Singapore Youth Award
Junior Chamber International (JCI) Singapore, Ten Outstanding Young Persons of the World - Business, Economic and/or Entrepreneurial Accomplishment
2016: ASEAN Youth Award
|
[
"Managing Director",
"Xie (surname)",
"National Environment Agency",
"Christopher de Souza",
"co-founder",
"Vivian Balakrishnan",
"National Junior College",
"Singapore Tourism Board",
"Ngee Ann Polytechnic",
"Singapore",
"Bukit Panjang",
"political science",
"businessman",
"14th Parliament of Singapore",
"politician",
"Liang Eng Hwa",
"Singapore Democratic Party",
"Sim Ann",
"The Honourable",
"economics",
"National University of Singapore",
"Bachelor of Arts",
"Home makers",
"Singapore Management University",
"Parliament of Singapore",
"Holland–Bukit Timah GRC",
"2020 Singaporean general election",
"People's Action Party",
"Holland–Bukit Timah Group Representation Constituency"
] |
62,111,166 |
Category:Badminton articles needing photographs
|
Articles are listed in this category because they were tagged with . You can help WikiProject Badminton by adding appropriate photos to the following articles.
|
[] |
62,111,168 |
Andrei Lozhkin (ice hockey)
|
Andrei Lozhkin (born January 2, 1985) is a Russian retired ice hockey centre.
== Career ==
Lozhkin played twenty games in the Russian Superleague and three games in the Kontinental Hockey League for Dynamo Moscow. He spent the majority of his career in Russia's second-tier leagues the Vysshaya Liga and the Supreme Hockey League. He played for Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod and Olimpiya Kirovo-Chepetsk of the Vysshaya Liga before playing for Dynamo Moscow.
He also played for Gazprom-OGU Orenburg, Rubin Tyumen, HC Ryazan, Ariada Volzhsk and HC Kuban before finishing his career with Yuzhny Ural Orsk.
==Career statistics==
|
[
"2015–16 VHL season",
"Point (ice hockey)",
"Ariada Volzhsk",
"Supreme Hockey League B",
"Playoffs",
"2008–09 Pervaya Liga season",
"2010–11 VHL season",
"2006–07 Vysshaya Liga season",
"2012–13 VHL season",
"HC Dynamo Moscow",
"Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic",
"Olimpiya Kirovo-Chepetsk",
"Kontinental Hockey League",
"2004–05 Pervaya Liga season",
"2002–03 Pervaya Liga season",
"Ariada-Akpars Volzhsk",
"Kirovo-Chepetsk",
"HC Ryazan",
"Assist (ice hockey)",
"2001–02 Pervaya Liga season",
"2004–05 Vysshaya Liga season",
"Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod",
"2007–08 Russian Superleague season",
"2008–09 Vysshaya Liga season",
"2009–10 Vysshaya Liga season",
"2013–14 VHL season",
"ice hockey",
"Regular season",
"Vysshaya Liga (1992–2010)",
"2011–12 VHL season",
"Gazovik Tyumen",
"2005–06 Vysshaya Liga season",
"Goal (ice hockey)",
"2014–15 VHL season",
"Russian Superleague",
"centre (ice hockey)",
"Rubin Tyumen",
"2007–08 Pervaya Liga season",
"Centre (ice hockey)",
"HC Kuban",
"Yuzhny Ural Orsk",
"Supreme Hockey League",
"Gazprom-OGU Orenburg",
"2008–09 KHL season",
"2002–03 Vysshaya Liga season",
"Russian Major League (1992–2010)",
"2003–04 Pervaya Liga season",
"2005–06 Pervaya Liga season",
"Season (sports)",
"2000–01 Pervaya Liga season",
"Penalty (ice hockey)"
] |
62,111,177 |
Module:Lang/tag from name/doc
|
This module creates language name (key) to language tag (value) support tables used by Module:Lang. Data are taken from Module:Lang/data:
rev_lang_table – data from the lang_name_table.lang table
rev_override_table – data from the override table
These reversed data tables are loaded and used by _name_from_tag().
|
[] |
62,111,179 |
U.R. Cadima
|
União Recreativa Cadima commonly known as Cadima, is a Portuguese women's football team based in Cadima, Cantanhede, district of Coimbra.
== Players ==
=== Current squad ===
== Honours ==
National Championship
Runners-up (1): 2010–11
AF Coimbra Cup
Winners (1): 2018–19
|
[
"Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino",
"Beatriz Jesus",
"Mónica Carvalho",
"Portugal",
"Coimbra Football Association",
"Campeonato Nacional II Divisão de Futebol Feminino",
"Coimbra",
"Kleydiana Borges",
"Cantanhede, Portugal"
] |
62,111,184 |
List of television series and films based on Oni Press publications
|
Below is a list of television series and feature films based on characters and concepts that have appeared in Oni Press publications, including its various imprints. This list includes live action and animated television series and films.
==Television==
===Live-action===
===Pilots===
===Animated===
==Film==
===Live-action===
==Reception==
===Box office===
===Critical and public reception===
|
[
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Scott Pilgrim Takes Off",
"Whiteout (2009 film)",
"Antony Johnston",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Focus Features",
"ABC Studios",
"Universal Television",
"American Broadcasting Company",
"Riley Keough",
"Universal Content Productions",
"Universal Pictures",
"Science Saru",
"Extraction 2",
"The Sixth Gun",
"Ruben Fleischer",
"CinemaScore",
"Fandango Media",
"Netflix",
"Oni Press",
"Metacritic",
"Studio 8 (company)",
"Extraction (2020 film)",
"List of Oni Press publications",
"Atomic Blonde",
"Box Office Mojo",
"NBC",
"Scott Pilgrim vs. the World",
"Warner Bros",
"The Bunker (comics)",
"Lionsgate Television",
"Stumptown (TV series)"
] |
62,111,189 |
Aschenborn
|
Aschenborn is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Dieter Aschenborn (1915–2002), Namibian painter, son of Hans
Hans Aschenborn (1888–1931), German painter
Uli Aschenborn (born 1947), South African painter, son of Dieter
|
[
"Dieter Aschenborn",
"Hans Aschenborn",
"Uli Aschenborn"
] |
62,111,193 |
The Man with the Glass Eye
|
The Man with the Glass Eye (German: Der Mann mit dem Glasauge) is a 1969 West German crime film directed by Alfred Vohrer and starring Horst Tappert, Karin Hübner and Hubert von Meyerinck. It is part of Rialto Film's long-running series of Edgar Wallace adaptations. Another English title is Terror on Half Moon Street.
The film's sets were designed by the art directors Walter Kutz and Wilhelm Vorwerg. It was shot at the Spandau Studios and on location in West Berlin, Hamburg and London.
==Cast==
|
[
"Horst Tappert",
"Berno von Cramm",
"Harry Wüstenhagen",
"Spandau Studios",
"Ladislas Fodor",
"Michael Simon (actor)",
"Jörn Ahrendt",
"Horst Wendlandt",
"Narziß Sokatscheff",
"Rialto Film",
"Franz-Otto Krüger",
"Heidrun Hankammer",
"Iris Berben",
"Ligia Lieveld",
"Karin Hübner",
"art director",
"Kurd Pieritz",
"location shooting",
"Hubert von Meyerinck",
"crime film",
"Fritz Klotsch",
"Alfred Vohrer",
"Günther Tabor",
"Rudolf Schündler",
"Karl Löb",
"Wilhelm Vorwerg",
"Gerd Prager",
"West Berlin",
"Fritz Wepper",
"Jan Hendriks",
"Christiane Krüger",
"Walter Kutz",
"Edgar Wallace",
"Hamburg",
"Ewa Strömberg",
"Peter Thomas (composer)",
"London",
"Constantin Film",
"Klaus Miedel",
"Jutta Hering",
"Otto Czarski",
"Maria Litto",
"Dörte Gentz",
"Ilse Pagé",
"Harry Riebauer",
"Marlies Dräger",
"German language",
"Tilo von Berlepsch"
] |
62,111,196 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Fileset
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. RL0919 (talk) 07:24, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Fileset===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
This article is a perfect example of how a technical dictionary entry must look like, but Wikipedia is not a dictionary. Like a perfect dictionary entry, it clarifies that "Fileset has several meanings and usages, depending on the context" (i.e. it is a homographs) and then proceeds to give meaning to three of them. In the end, it fails to help the reader understand more than what "file" and "set" alone say.
All sources are primary and the notability is non-existent, but that's how a dictionary entry is. flowing dreams (talk page) 11:42, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Computing-related deletion discussions. flowing dreams (talk page) 11:42, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Software-related deletion discussions. flowing dreams (talk page) 11:42, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: At the time of this post I amusingly observe :Wikt:Fileset does not exist ... there may well be a rush to do it now. It any detail was placed there I'd likely be kicked off to put it on English Wikipedia! There's more going on here than is suitable for Wikidictionary.Djm-leighpark (talk) 21:21, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Yes, I can see that you've actively attempted to change it into a prose form that would seem less and less suitable for a dictionary. However, still anyone who knows what's a file, has no need of reading this article. It is not article; it's just arbitrary prose. For the same reason, we have no dictionary entries for "tool set", "lego set", or "set of silver knives"; those who know what's a tool, a lego, or cutlery, have pretty good idea as to what the former terms mean. flowing dreams (talk page) 10:57, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
The difference to arbitrary combinations of words such as "tool set" or "lego set" is that there are proper definitions for the term "fileset" (and "file set") in several contexts of computing. This is what makes this encyclopedically relevant. --Matthiaspaul (talk) 11:42, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Natg 19 (talk) 07:08, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep. While there was some dictionary-typish in the article at the time of nomination, fileset is a proper term used in some contexts of computing (although with somewhat varying definitions). The article has been considerably worked one since then, more references were added. A short Google search revealed that even more could be added to the article in the future, so this clearly has enough potential for an article on Wikipedia (rather than only at Wiktionary). --Matthiaspaul (talk) 10:55, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment Nominator was a sock, struck through their post. Doug Weller talk 10:49, 29 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.
|
[
"Wikt:Fileset",
"file (computing)",
"tool",
"homographs",
"cutlery",
"lego",
"Fileset",
"WP:NOTDICT"
] |
62,111,199 |
Casandra Damirón metro station
|
Casandra Damirón is a Santo Domingo Metro station on Line 1. It was open on 22 January 2009 as part of the inaugural section of Line 1 between Mamá Tingó and Centro de los Héroes. The station is between Juan Bosch and Joaquín Balaguer.
This is an underground station, built below Avenida Máximo Gómez. It is named to honor Casandra Damirón.
|
[
"Joaquín Balaguer metro station",
"Casandra Damirón",
"Centro de los Héroes metro station",
"Juan Bosch metro station",
"Mamá Tingó metro station",
"Avenida Máximo Gómez",
"Santo Domingo Metro"
] |
62,111,202 |
Florence Canning
|
Florence Mary Canning (19 May 1863 – 24 December 1914) was a British suffragette and Chair of the Executive Committee of the Church League for Women's Suffrage.
==Early life==
Canning was born in Hereford on 19 May 1863. She was the eldest daughter of the Reverend Thomas Canning, vicar of Tupsley, and his wife Elizabeth Hampden Phillips. Florence had six siblings, four brothers and two sisters, one of whom, Frances Ethel Canning, became an author and Conservative Church suffragist. She performed with a number of other pupils of Dr Herbert Wareing in a concert at the Public Hall in Worcester in July 1889.
Canning became a professional artist and exhibited her paintings at exhibitions in Hereford and London.
==Activism==
Canning joined the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1906. She appears on the Suffragette Roll of Honour, having been imprisoned at least twice, firstly in 1908 when she was sent to Holloway Prison after being arrested on a deputation to the Prime Minister.
Canning convalesced on more than on occasion at Eagle House, Batheaston (home of the Blathwayt family) where she planted an Oregon cedar at Annie’s Arboretum on 25 April 1909. Canning was injured in the Black Friday protests on 18 November 1910 but never regained her health, being subsequently diagnosed with breast cancer. When the 1911 census was taken, she participated in the suffragette boycott and evaded being enumerated. before ill-health later forced her to resign. She did attend the General Council meeting of the CLWS which took place in Brighton in July 1913, and appears in a photograph taken by Muriel Darton alongside other delegates including two Indian women. Canning was “most decidedly in favour” of the ordination of women, in correspondence to Ursula Roberts dating from 1913.
Newspaper reports show Canning travelling the country to speak about suffrage, travelling as far as the Isle of Skye and Dublin. She also worked for the East London Federation of Suffragettes, established by Sylvia Pankhurst.
==Later life==
Florence did not live to see women win the vote. She died on Christmas Eve 1914 in Brighton,
A fund was set up in her memory by her friends, including CUWFA member, Gertrude Eaton, to raise money for the Women’s Hospital for Children. By 1917 it had collected £265 to equip and furnish an operating theatre in Canning’s memory. Her tree in the aboreatum at Eagle House in Batheaston was bulldozed with dozens of others in the 1960s.
In 2018, she was honoured with a Violet Plaque, an initiative of Hereford Cathedral funded by the National Lottery. In 2022 an appeal was launched by a local suffrage researcher to raise £1,000 to renovate her grave.
|
[
"Batheaston",
"Emily Blathwayt",
"Muriel Darton",
"Dublin",
"1911 United Kingdom census",
"Louisa Martindale",
"Sylvia Pankhurst",
"Herbert Wareing",
"Hereford Cathedral",
"Brighton",
"Hereford",
"Tupsley",
"Isle of Skye",
"Women’s Social and Political Union",
"Ursula Roberts",
"National Lottery (United Kingdom)",
"Church League for Women's Suffrage",
"Gertrude Eaton",
"Workers' Socialist Federation",
"Eagle House (suffragette's rest)",
"Holloway Prison",
"London",
"Annie Kenney",
"Conservative and Unionist Women's Franchise Association",
"Black Friday (1910)"
] |
62,111,208 |
Category:Covered bridges in Northampton County, Pennsylvania
|
Categories and articles related to notable covered bridges in Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
|
[
"Northampton County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,209 |
Ieva Lešinska
|
Ieva Lešinska (born 2 July 1958) is a Latvian translator, journalist and editor.
== Biography ==
Ieva Lešinska-Geibere (Ieva Lešinska) studied English philology at the University of Latvia. In 1978 she defected to the United States with her father, a USSR diplomat who was a spy for the US, where she was granted political asylum. In the USA Lešinska studied at Ohio State University and the University of Colorado. In 1987 she moved to Sweden, where she worked as a journalist and translator, and studied for a Master of Arts in Baltic philology at the Stockholm University. She now lives in Riga and works as a translator.
The story of Lešinska and her father's defection to the USA was made into the film "My Father the Spy" which premiered in June 2019 at Sheffield International Documentary Festival. In the film, Lešinska investigates the life of her father, Imants Lešinskis, who was a double agent and spy for the CIA and KGB, and the events which led him to organising for her to visit him on the holiday which would lead to her defection. The film describes the story of how Lešinska was forced to leave Latvia and her mother, whom she would never see again, and became a political refugee in the USA. Member of the Latvian Writers' Union (2004).
|
[
"Defection",
"Inga Gaile",
"philology",
"Stockholm University",
"Ohio State University",
"Timothy D. Snyder",
"Kārlis Vērdiņš",
"John Cornwell (writer)",
"Riga",
"Baltic languages",
"James Breslin",
"David Lodge (author)",
"Bret Easton Ellis",
"Jhumpa Lahiri",
"USSR",
"Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald",
"University of Colorado",
"Pauls Bankovskis",
"Māris Čaklais",
"Toni Morrison",
"Right of asylum",
"Sheffield Doc/Fest",
"Aleksandrs Čaks",
"Therese Anne Fowler",
"Modris Eksteins",
"John Irving",
"Uldis Bērziņš",
"University of Latvia"
] |
62,111,221 |
Atomic Heart
|
Atomic Heart is a 2023 first-person shooter video game developed by Mundfish Studio. It was published by VK Play, Focus Entertainment, and 4Divinity.
The game is set in an alternate history version of the Soviet Union, during the 1950s. Initially depicted as a retrofuturistic utopia, the game follows the collapse of the Soviet Union, after a robot uprising.
Atomic Heart was released for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S on February 21, 2023. The game received mixed reviews from critics, and received controversy over its reported links to Russia. It gained several awards.
==Gameplay==
Atomic Heart is a first-person shooter video game with role-playing elements. A crafting system allows the player to piece weapons together from metal parts that can be detached from robots or taken from household appliances. Ammo in the game is scarce, so the player also has the option to use rechargeable energy guns. Quick-time events are featured in the game.
The player wears a special glove, the Polymer Glove, which grants powers such as telekinesis, freezing, shield, electricity and others to defeat foes. Its powers can be combined with both melee and ranged weapons.
Weapons can be upgraded and embedded with various elemental effects using cartridges. These cartridges can be looted, crafted and equipped by the player on both melee and ranged weapons.
To cover distances faster in certain large open spaces, players can use cars left in these areas. Players also have to solve various puzzles that are encountered throughout the main campaign and side Polygons (Testing Grounds). After one of the released patches in June 2024, the game also offers accessibility settings, which include not only puzzles auto-solve, but also colorblind mode, auto QTE, auto-heal, and some others.
==Plot==
===Setting===
Atomic Heart takes place on the grounds of Facility 3826, the Soviet Union's foremost scientific research hub in an alternate history 1955, located in the Kazakh SSR. In 1936, scientist Dmitry Sechenov developed a liquidized programmable module called the Polymer, sparking massive technological breakthroughs in the fields of energy and robotics in the USSR and freeing much of the populace from manual labor. When World War II broke out, the Soviets quickly gained the upper hand, but just before Nazi Germany was defeated in 1942, the Nazis secretly unleashed the Brown Plague virus, leaving millions dead and creating an international demand for Soviet robots to compensate for the resulting worker shortage. As part of the Soviet Union's post-war reconstruction program, Dr. Sechenov created a wireless, networked artificial intelligence called "Kollektiv 1.0" that linked his robots together for greater efficiency.
Sechenov later developed the THOUGHT, a neuroconnector that integrates Polymer into the human body, enabling direct interaction with robots. Designed to launch alongside Kollektiv 2.0, it was intended to usher in a true post-labor era. However, the launch resulted in a catastrophic failure, plunging Facility 3826 into chaos.
===Synopsis===
Major Sergey "P-3" Nechayev is a special agent with memory loss, saved from a life-threatening injury by Dmitry Sechenov. As Sechenov's agent, P-3 is sent to assist with the Kollektiv 2.0 rollout at Facility 3826, only to discover that the facility's robots have gone rogue, killing most of the human staff. Sechenov informs him that Viktor Petrov, a robotics designer, sabotages the Kollektiv node and orders P-3 to capture him. Accompanied by his AI partner CHAR-les, integrated into his glove, P-3 must confront the facility’s rogue robots and failed biomechanical experiments.
P-3 finds Viktor Petrov working with neurosurgeon Larisa Filatova, but Petrov seemingly dies while fleeing. Suspicious of Facility 3826, the Politburo sends Yegor Molotov, who threatens to halt the launch of Kollektiv 2.0.
CHAR-les reveals a power struggle over Kollektiv between Sechenov and the Politburo. Sechenov orders P-3 to accompany Molotov, but P-3 blacks out and later finds Molotov murdered. Sechenov then reveals that Petrov is alive, having faked his death with Filatova’s help.
P-3 finds Viktor Petrov at the Theater, where Petrov reveals that civilian robots always had combat mode and accuses Sechenov of planning global enslavement. He gives P-3 a pair of rings before committing suicide. Suspecting the "Atomic Heart" project involves deploying combat robots to seize nuclear plants, P-3 takes Petrov's head to Michael Stockhausen, Sechenov's deputy, for memory extraction. However, Filatova intervenes and throws a grenade, resulting in Stockhausen’s death and knocking P-3 unconscious. CHAR-les reveals that the rings are top-secret devices which allow the wearer to join Kollektiv 2.0 while remaining "invisible" to the network, thus gaining unrestricted authority and control within the Kollektiv.
When P-3 wakes up, Filatova contacts him and meets him in secret at a secluded area in Facility 3826. She reveals to him that Kollektiv is a means to mind-control people, and Filatova was in charge of the facility that houses numerous volunteers of the project. P-3 also discovers that CHAR-les isn't an AI, but rather the preserved consciousness of Chariton Zakharov, Sechenov's colleague and a fellow researcher presumably murdered by Sechenov. Using Zakharov's security clearance, they uncover more of P-3's past: he was previously critically injured in a mission in Bulgaria alongside his wife and fellow agent, Ekaterina "Blesna" Nechayeva. While Blesna did not survive, Sechenov managed to fix P-3's brain injury by installing a Polymer implant, erasing memories of Blesna while also implanting her memories into robotic ballerina bodyguards called the Twins. In doing so, Sechenov gains control over P-3. Furious, P-3 decides to confront Sechenov. However, he blacks out again and wakes up in the care of his mother-in-law, Zinaida Muravyova, who has been anonymously assisting him throughout his mission in Facility 3826. She reveals that P-3 had killed Filatova while blacked out. At this point, P-3 can either choose to leave Facility 3826 or confront Sechenov, resulting in different endings.
If P-3 refuses to confront Sechenov, he destroys Zakharov and slips out of Facility 3826 and disappears, allowing Sechenov to continue with his plans to activate Kollektiv 2.0. Zakharov is shown to still be alive as a small mass of living Polymer and he manages to escape as well.
If P-3 chooses to confront Sechenov, he enters his office, where they argue before Sechenov orders the Twins to attack. After P-3 defeats them, Sechenov draws a pistol, but P-3 uses his glove to disarm him and shoots him in the gut. Wounded, Sechenov reveals that Zakharov manipulated P-3’s blackouts, making him unknowingly kill Molotov and Filatova. Enraged, P-3 tries to remove Zakharov from his glove, but Zakharov electrocutes him and escapes as a gray mass. Declaring his intent to exterminate humanity, Zakharov jumps into a vat of red Polymer, transforming into a massive black humanoid. He then picks up Sechenov, breaks his neck, and later consumes his body before vanishing. P-3 later awakens in an illusion, where one of the Twins reaches out to him as Ekaterina’s voice speaks.
====Annihilation Instinct====
Taking place three days after the ending where P-3 refuses to confront Sechenov, Kollektiv 2.0 is fully operational, but Zakharov, merged within the network, has brainwashed people and leaked information, sparking a civil war. P-3 wakes in the Mendeleev Complex, now controlled by the rogue AI NORA, who has fallen in love with him and synced to his implant. She orders him to eliminate Zinaida, now leading an anti-Kollektiv faction. Heading to the surface, P-3 encounters NORA's inventor, Lebedev. He repairs P-3’s glove and explains that Zinaida seeks to control NORA for her weapon-making capabilities. To stop her, P-3 must collect BEA-D robots containing NORA’s code to reset her.
NORA tempts P-3 with secrets about Blesna, but Lebedev connects him to Sechenov, who reveals that he preserved Blesna's brain in neuropolymer to revive her. He offers P-3 full access to his past and a leave of absence. P-3 agrees, resets NORA with the Twins' help, and restores order. As promised, Sechenov grants him leave, but as P-3 departs, Zinaida follows.
====Trapped in Limbo====
Taking place after the ending in which P-3 confronts Sechenov and is betrayed by Zakharov, P-3 awakens in Limbo, the same surreal dimension he encountered during his blackouts in the main game. Blesna, now in the form of a Polymer teardrop (which was also encountered briefly in the Annihilation Instinct DLC), guides P-3 through this dimension as they recover the latter's memory. She reveals that her consciousness has also been trapped in Limbo, which was designed by Sechenov to house the minds of those using the Kollektiv in order to mind-control people. Blesna also briefs P-3 on the events in the real world, informing the latter that while Sechenov's body has disappeared, Kollektiv 2.0 has yet to launch, and P-3's own unconscious body has been taken to a lab alongside the bodies of the Twins. By completing puzzles and traversing a surreal, platforming-based landscape, P-3 eventually escapes Limbo and awakens, and sets out to find the rings he threw in the lake in order to restore Blesna.
====Enchantment Under the Sea====
Taking place after Trapped in Limbo, P-3 interacts with one of the Twins' bodies, which allows Blesna to take over his glove and function similarly to CHAR-les. The two of them escape Facility 3826, though P-3's arm is injured in the process. They reunite with Zinaida, who learns of her daughter's survival. She then sends them to Triton, an underwater facility where they can acquire tools to retrieve the rings.
At Triton, P-3 and Blesna become acquainted with new allies: technician Nikolai, cetologist Nastya, and security officer "Hunter". P-3 helps the three of them with migrating a school of dolphins within Triton to safety; in return, one of the dolphins is assigned to retrieve the rings. Zinaida later sends one of the Twins' bodies to Triton, much to Blesna's dismay. Nikolai later reveals that he was sent to Triton to deliver Samodelkin, a highly advanced repair system created by Dr. Lebedev. He also recognizes Blesna as the one with the protocol to activate Samodelkin. Using Samodelkin, P-3 is able to fix his arm, as well as establish a connection between Blesna and Samodelkin.
As the group prepares to escape Triton, P-3 and Blesna are intercepted by MOR-4Y, a gigantic eel robot roaming the facility. Blesna, through Samodelkin's connection, transfers her consciousness to the Twin robot body, and assists P-3 in destroying MOR-4Y. The dolphin later returns and gives P-3 the rings, which he then puts on Blesna's hand. After taking a moment of respite on the surface, P-3 decides they are ready to pursue Zakharov.
== Development ==
Mundfish Studio was founded in 2017. Its key figures are the company's president Robert Bagratuni, CFO Evgenia Sedova, art director Artyom Galeev, and producer Oleg Gorodishenin.
Bagratuni and Galeev have known each other since the early 2000s, having worked at advertising companies. Bagratuni focused on marketing, while Galeev specialized in computer graphics. After the economic downturn in 2008, when the advertising market collapsed, the share of video games increased. Sedova and Bagratuni met at the company Newmedia Stars. Before merging with Galeev and founding the game studio Mundfish, they had completed several joint projects. The key figures at Mundfish do not have direct ties to Russia or its president, Vladimir Putin. At the age of 19, a producer Oleg Gorodishenin joined the studio (listed in Forbes 30 Under 30 in 2023). The development of Atomic Heart was initially funded by Bagratuni, Sedova, and non-public shareholders. According to Crunchbase, Mundfish raised $16 million in two investment rounds in 2019 and 2021. According to Forbes, the amount from the Chinese investment holding Tencent, the international investment company GEM Capital, and the founder of the game studio Gaijin Entertainment, Anton Yudintsev, could be around $20 million.
In the summer of 2018, Nvidia offered Mundfish Studio to release the game on the RTX platform, which supports ray tracing and DLSS technology for GeForce RTX graphics cards. They provided their equipment, access to a special version of the Unreal Engine 4, and tools for the game's implementation. Nvidia partially took on the marketing promotion, showcasing RTX capabilities at maximum settings in an Atomic Heart trailer at the Gamescom gaming convention in Cologne. It was added in a beta version after an update on June 11, 2024.
== Soundtrack ==
The game's soundtrack was written by three composers: Mick Gordon, famous for his work for video-game titles such as Doom, Prey and Wolfenstein (The New Order, The Old Blood, The New Colossus), Andrey "Boogrov" Bugrov, and Geoffrey Day.
The game's music composer Mick Gordon released a statement condemning the war and donating his fee from the project to the Red Cross Ukraine Crisis appeal.
==Release==
In February 2022 a story trailer showed that Atomic Heart will launch in "#######BER", suggesting the game's release some time in Q4 2022. However, later in November, it was announced that the game will be released on February 21, 2023, published by VK Play in the CIS, co-published by 4Divinity from Singapore-based entertainment marketing group GCL in Asia, and published by French-based company Focus Entertainment elsewhere.
The game's first DLC expansion, titled Annihilation Instinct, was released on all platforms on August 2, 2023. The second DLC, Trapped in Limbo, was released on February 6, 2024. The third DLC, Enchantment Under the Sea, was released on January 28, 2025. It introduced new weapons, abilities, and allowed players to explore the underwater Triton complex.
===Sales===
Atomic Heart sold above expectations, raising Mundfish's revenue to an all-time high. Three weeks after the game's launch, Mundfish announced that the game had been played by five million players. However, the game was also available upon launch on Xbox Game Pass, which accounted for an unknown percentage of players. It was removed from Game Pass on August 31, 2024.
==Resonance==
The company has faced significant criticism for the Russian origins of its founders. Since February 2024, Mundfish has removed mentions of its Russian office from the official website and positions itself as international company with "an incredible team… from 10 countries including Poland, Ukraine, Austria, Georgia, Israel, Armenia, UAE, Serbia, and Cyprus." In 2018, the studio employed just over 20 people, while by early 2023, that number had grown to around 130.
The studio is carefully distancing from Russian political statements. Many game developers and publishers have spoken out against the war, stopped selling games in Russia and Belarus, and donated to humanitarian causes. The Ukrainian Ministry of Digital Transformation critiqued Mundfish, noting that "the developers of the game did not come out with a public statement condemning the Putin regime" and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, also pointing out that the game has "Russian roots and romanticizes communist ideology and the Soviet Union." The February 21 release date drew criticism because it nearly coinciding with the first year anniversary of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and Defender of the Fatherland Day, on February 24 and 23 respectively. Developer Mundfish stated that the company is neutral in world affairs and "do not comment on politics or religion". Mundfish also added that the studio "is undeniably a pro-peace organization against violence against people".(PS5) 70/100(XSXS) 73/100
| Destruct = 6/10
| GI = 7.75/10
| GSpot = 6/10
| GRadar =
| HCG = 4.5/5
| IGN = 8/10
| NME =
| PCGUS = 78/100
| PCGN = 8/10
| PSQ =
| SN = 9/10
}}
Atomic Heart received "mixed or average" reviews from critics for the PS5 and Xbox Series X/S versions, while the PC version received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator website Metacritic.
===Themes and analysis===
Atomic Heart was interpreted by many game critics and journalists as a political satire of authoritarianism, artificial intelligence, and communism. Ed Power of The Daily Telegraph wrote that:
"Playing the game, the player will be left with no doubt as to the dark side of Soviet manifest destiny. The central conflict is between the Politburo and Sechenov. The implication is that the latter is a power-hungry madman who has poisoned the Communist dream. Whatever Atomic Heart is, it isn't a love letter to the Soviet Union. This is a paradise lost, fatally undone by its Prometheus complex."
Journalist Kevin Purdy of Ars Technica wrote that within the game:
The USSR makes the world's best robots, its citizens live in a utopia where those robots do their menial tasks and labor, and even greater things are just about to happen...a world full of astounding promises, yet take apart that optimism by showing the hypocrisy, the false promises, the ego-driven leaders and actors causing so much pain, and the impact on real people's lives when it all comes apart...The Soviet State in Atomic Heart, and its maniacal leaders, are responsible for the death of untold thousands or millions of citizens at the hands of their own robots. There are plans to foist this death on the rest of the world, rather than win them over with the benefits of collectivist effort. The KGB, for which your protagonist formerly worked, are not the good guys. Renata Price of Vice News also wrote that the game "depicts a scenario where the Soviet Union's quest for technology and expansion—there are numerous sarcastic references to conquering the stars—has gone horribly, murderously wrong...To call Atomic Heart a straight-up celebration of the Soviet Union would be a misrepresentation."
== Awards ==
In November 2023, Atomic Heart joined the “Hall of Fame” of the Russian gaming industry, winning in the “Legendary Video Games” categories.
==Sequel==
In 2021, two years prior to release of the Atomic Heart, the developers stated that they already had plans for a sequel. In June 2023, Mundfish's studio head officially confirmed the development of a sequel.
|
[
"International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement",
"Commonwealth of Independent States",
"Single-player",
"Annie Awards",
"The Times",
"BioShock",
"PCGamesN",
"GeForce",
"Prometheus",
"First-person shooter",
"VK (company)",
"Deep learning super sampling",
"Xbox Game Pass",
"Bulgaria",
"GameSpot",
"USSR",
"utopia",
"Microsoft Windows",
"AAA (video game industry)",
"KGB",
"manifest destiny",
"first-person shooter",
"Nazi Germany",
"Soviet Union",
"Alla Pugacheva",
"Unreal Engine 4",
"Crunchbase",
"The Steam Awards",
"Platformer",
"alternate history",
"Tencent",
"civil war",
"Vox Media",
"Doom (2016 video game)",
"Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022–present)",
"The Daily Telegraph",
"Steam (service)",
"TASS",
"telekinesis",
"Mick Gordon (composer)",
"review aggregator",
"Xbox One",
"Abu Dhabi",
"artificial intelligence",
"Nvidia RTX",
"Grass by the Home",
"Downloadable content",
"PlayStation 4",
"Quick time event",
"Gamescom",
"Forbes",
"AI takeover",
"Game Informer",
"Wolfenstein",
"authoritarianism",
"Ars Technica",
"Defender of the Fatherland Day",
"PlayStation 5",
"Vice News",
"communism",
"IGN",
"Ray tracing (graphics)",
"Ministry of Digital Transformation (Ukraine)",
"Prey (2017 video game)",
"Shacknews",
"Xbox Series X and Series S",
"Nvidia",
"NAVGTR Awards",
"World War II",
"Pesniary",
"Focus Entertainment",
"Windows",
"Yerevan",
"Destructoid",
"GameRevolution",
"PC Gamer",
"20th British Academy Games Awards",
"computer graphics",
"role-playing video game",
"Politburo",
"British Academy of Film and Television Arts",
"Igromania",
"Push Square",
"Arlekino",
"Metacritic",
"Retrofuturism",
"NME",
"Zemlyane",
"Gaijin Entertainment",
"Polygon (website)",
"GamesRadar+",
"14th Hollywood Music in Media Awards",
"Vladimir Putin",
"Zvyozdnoye leto",
"Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic"
] |
62,111,228 |
Pilerwa, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Pilerwa
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 50
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Pilerwa had a population of 50 people.
== Demographics ==
In the , Pilerwa had a population of 51 people.
In the , Pilerwa had a population of 50 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Pilerwa. The nearest government primary school is Mungar State School in neighbouring Mungar to the east. The nearest government secondary school is Aldridge State High School in Maryborough to the north-east. There are also non-government schools in Maryborough.
|
[
"Mungar, Queensland",
"Hervey Bay",
"Yerra, Queensland",
"Pastoralism",
"Antigua, Queensland",
"sugarcane",
"Maryborough, Queensland",
"Queensland Government",
"Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)",
"Brisbane",
"Fraser Coast Region",
"Division of Wide Bay",
"Queensland",
"Mungar",
"rural residential",
"AEST",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)"
] |
62,111,229 |
Kezol-tsa Forest
|
The Kezol-tsa Forest is a thick old-growth forest along the southern and northern edges of the Indian states of Nagaland and Manipur. The forest is located on the southern part of Dzüko Valley.
This forest has dry, warm summers and cool winter. The accumulation of several inches of snow during the winter is not uncommon and can stay on the ground for several days.
Some threats to the Kezol-tsa forest include logging, changing fire regimes and climate change.
== Flora and Fauna ==
The Kezol-tsa forests has diverse species of trees.
Animals that may be found in this forest include the deer, etc.
== Dispute ==
Kezol-tsa has been the center stage of dispute between the Mao Council of Manipur and the Southern Angami Public Organization (SAPO) of Nagaland. Both parties have been stalking claim for Kezol-tsa forest for the last many years.
On 23 November 2000, a rest house constructed by volunteers from Viswema at Kezol-tsa was destroyed by suspected Songsong villagers and this led to tension between Mao people and the Southern Angamis. On enquiry made by Memai Council of Mao, it was found that some youths from Songsong village had destroyed the rest house and the written report was intimated by Memai Council of Mao to the then Japfüphiki Public Organization which is renamed now as Southern Angami Public Organization. During this relevant time of tension, the then Tenyimi Central Union (TCU) intervened and directed the defaulters (Songsong village) to reconstruct the rest house of the Southern Angamis which read as ‘the destroyed rest house should be re-constructed to its original shape by Songsong village within 20 (twenty) days with effect from 15th February 2001’.
The destroyed rest house was re-constructed to its original shape by the Songsong village within the stipulated time and Southern Angami ownership of Kezol-tsa is undisturbed until tensions rose again in 2015.
|
[
"Dzüko Valley",
"logging",
"Mao Naga people",
"fire regime",
"old-growth forest",
"deer",
"Southern Angami",
"Manipur",
"snow",
"Southern Angami Public Organization",
"climate change",
"Nagaland",
"India",
"Viswema"
] |
62,111,232 |
Jammet Restaurant
|
Jammet Restaurant, also called Restaurant Jammet () or The Jammet Hotel and Restaurant, was a French restaurant located in Dublin, Ireland between 1901 and 1967.
According to a 1990s Dublin Tourism brochure, the "famous Jammet's Restaurant [..] flourished throughout the first half of this century".
==History==
Jammet opened on 6 March 1901 at 26–27 Saint Andrew's Street, opposite St Andrew's Church. It was established by Michel Jammet, nine years chef to George Cadogan, 5th Earl Cadogan, and his brother François. For a long time it was the only French restaurant in the city.
It was mentioned in James Joyce's Ulysses: (published 1922, set in 1904): a stream-of-consciousness section mentions "that highclass whore in Jammet’s", while Corny Kelleher later mentions "Two commercials that were standing fizz in Jammet’s" (i.e. two travelling salesman that were buying champagne).
Jammet's moved to 46 Nassau Street in 1926. In 1928, Vogue described Jammet’s as “one of Europe’s best restaurants . . . crowded with gourmets and wits”, where the sole and grouse were “divine”.
Jammet and his wife Yvonne (née Auger) ran the French Benevolent Society during the Second World War, and were staunch supporters of the Free French and Charles de Gaulle.
One of the earliest surviving menus is from 1949; it shows an idea of haute cuisine based on the ideas of Auguste Escoffier.
In 1963 Egon Ronay visited, saying "Space, grace, the charm of small red leather armchairs, fin-de-siècle murals and marble oyster counters exude a bygone age. Ritz and Escoffier would feel at home here."
|
[
"Auguste Escoffier",
"Irish Times",
"St Andrew's Church, Dublin (Church of Ireland)",
"Yvonne Jammet",
"Rita Hayworth",
"Aly Khan",
"Jackie Kennedy",
"César Ritz",
"James Joyce",
"Michael Collins (Irish leader)",
"St Andrew's Street, Dublin",
"whore",
"Dublin",
"John Lennon",
"W. B. Yeats",
"Second World War",
"George Cadogan, 5th Earl Cadogan",
"French cuisine",
"Free French",
"Republic of Ireland",
"James Cagney",
"Charles de Gaulle",
"Danny Kaye",
"haute cuisine",
"Lennox Robinson",
"Black grouse",
"Vogue (magazine)",
"champagne",
"Ulysses (novel)",
"The Irish Times",
"Common sole",
"fin-de-siècle",
"John F. Kennedy",
"Hilton Edwards",
"Orson Welles",
"Egon Ronay",
"Charlie Haughey",
"Irish Free State",
"Ireland",
"stream-of-consciousness",
"Nassau Street, Dublin",
"Micheál MacLiammóir",
"Dublin Institute of Technology",
"Liam O’Flaherty"
] |
62,111,239 |
Echites umbellatus
|
Echites umbellatus is a flowering climber, belonging to subfamily Apocynoideae of the family Apocynaceae and has the English common name devil's potato. It was first described in 1760 by Dutch botanist, Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin. The species grows in parts of Florida, Tabasco, Yucatán Peninsula, Belize, Honduras, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Bahamas, Turks and Caicos Islands, and the Colombian islands in the Western Caribbean.
It is a perennial with white flowers and is toxic., containing lycopsamine-type pyrrolizidine alkaloids. Disease associated with consumption of PAs is known as pyrrolizidine alkaloidosis and many such alkaloids exhibit hepatotoxicity i.e. can cause severe liver damage, including hepatic veno-occlusive disease and liver cancer They are also tumorigenic.
|
[
"hepatic veno-occlusive disease",
"liver",
"pyrrolizidine alkaloid",
"Cancer Research (journal)",
"lycopsamine",
"hepatotoxicity",
"Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin",
"pyrrolizidine alkaloidosis",
"Food and Drug Administration",
"Apocynoideae",
"Bad Bug Book",
"liver cancer",
"tumorigenic",
"Apocynaceae"
] |
62,111,252 |
Abigail Kwarteng
|
Abigail Kwarteng (born January 13, 1997, in Bekwai) is a Ghanaian high jumper. She has competed at world championships, most recently at the 2019 African Games in Rabat, Morocco.
== Education ==
She was a student of Alabama University. and currently attends Middle Tennessee State University.
== Career ==
In February 2016 she performed impressively at the National Open Athletics Championship which qualified her for the 2016 Africa Athletics Championships. Kwarteng made her first international experience in 2016 at the African Championships in Athletics in Durban, where she finished fourth with 1.76 m, as well as two years later at the African Championships in Asaba with 1.80 m. In 2019 she took part for the first time in the African Games in Rabat and made a jump of 1.75 m which earned her the eight position.
== Personal best ==
=== Outdoor ===
High jump: 1.87 m, 5 May 2018 in Lubbock
=== Indoor ===
High jump (hall): 1.82 m, February 23, 2019, in Fayetteville
|
[
"2016 African Championships in Athletics – Women's high jump",
"Rabat",
"University of Alabama",
"Athletics at the 2019 African Games – Women's high jump",
"Morocco"
] |
62,111,253 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/mudrassignificado.com.br
|
== Links ==
mudrassignificado.com.br resolves to [//162.241.132.126 162.241.132.126]
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 36 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,111,255 |
Category:Covered bridges in Carbon County, Pennsylvania
|
Articles on covered bridges in Carbon County, Pennsylvania, United States.
|
[
"Carbon County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,261 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/loginz.org
|
== Links ==
loginz.org resolves to [//91.234.35.33 91.234.35.33]
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"
] |
62,111,268 |
Church of Our Lady of Hal, Camden Town
|
Our Lady of Hal is the Catholic parish church for the Camden Town area of London. The church was completed in 1933, and was under the authority of the Missionary Fathers of Scheut in Belgium until it came under the Catholic Diocese of Westminster in 1982. The church is the site for the English shrine to Our Lady of Hal, a medieval statue believed to be miraculous, in Halle, Belgium.
==History of the church==
The church is named for Our Lady of Hal, a statue of the Virgin Mary which arrived in Halle (Hal in French) in 1267 as a wedding gift to John II, Count of Holland and of Hainaut. The cult of Mary attracted important visitors to Halle, including Edward I of England and Ludwig the Bavarian, making it an important frontier town between Hainaut and Brabant.
After World War I, Belgium was devastated. The Missionary Fathers of Scheut, also known as the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (CICM), decided to establish a centre in a safe location from which they could send out their missionaries. As many Belgian refugees at that time were living in London it was thought that a church in that city would serve the spiritual needs of the Belgian community of London and also become a base for the Order's missionary activities. who worked extensively for the Diocese of Portsmouth on churches such as St Joseph's Church, Newbury, to design and build a new, permanent church that would demonstrate its Belgian origins. The foundation stone was laid on 17 July 1932, and the church was blessed and opened on 18 March 1933. Once the church was completed, a copy of the original statue of the Virgin Mary in Halle, carved from a dark fruitwood, was placed in the Hal Chapel in the church's north-east side.
In 1982, all but one of the remaining Belgian Fathers were recalled to Belgium, and the Diocese of Westminster took over the running of the parish. However, the connection with Belgium is maintained with regular pilgrimages to Halle and the Scheut Fathers. The church also has a memorial to Albert I, King of the Belgians.
==Design==
Designed by architect Wilfred Clarence Mangan, known for his Byzantine-influenced church buildings,
In the three arches over the main entrance are decorative mosaics; the one in the centre depicts Our Lady of Hal, flanked by shields of arms. The entrance leads to a wide passage beneath a deep gallery in the west of the church directly into a wide nave without aisles. The roof of the nave sits on pointed arches of chamfered concrete sitting on corbel supports, while the roof above the nave is built with exposed rafters and dormer windows. The side chapel in the northeast of the church is divided from the nave by a glazed screen.
|
[
"Catholic Church",
"Edward I of England",
"Albert I of Belgium",
"Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor",
"Margaret Fairchild",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster",
"Arlington Road, London",
"corbel",
"nave",
"Halle, Belgium",
"chamfer",
"World War I",
"dormer",
"John II, Count of Holland",
"Catholic Diocese of Westminster",
"Catholic Directory",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth",
"Alan Bennett",
"polychromatic",
"Duchy of Brabant",
"Gloucester Crescent, Camden",
"St Joseph's Church, Newbury",
"Monarchy of Belgium",
"CICM Missionaries",
"County of Hainaut",
"parish church",
"Camden Town",
"Clergy house"
] |
62,111,271 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/kinro.jointv.jp
|
== Links ==
kinro.jointv.jp resolves to [//18.176.209.236 18.176.209.236]
kinro.jointv.jp is hosted on kinro.ntv.co.jp
kinro.ntv.co.jp resolves to [//52.193.133.87 52.193.133.87]
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 ==
Too many link additions (734)
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,111,283 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mr Dawar (2nd nomination)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. Clear consensus that notability is still not demonstrated, with COI editing from a now confirmed sock. I will also watchlist and page and salt the page if we get a similar recreation Nosebagbear (talk) 13:16, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Mr Dawar===
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Previously deleted see Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mr Dawar. Non-notable artist with references mainly to social media or other unreliable sites. As previously, also poorly written and very likely an autobiography, COI related or 'fan' piece. Eagleash (talk) 11:57, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Bands and musicians-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 12:25, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Pakistan-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 12:25, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Tripodandstudentcard (talk) 15:26, 20 October 2019 (UTC)What's wrong with you guys why always you delete this article why are you jelous why you guys didnt saw others to come up why you guys have so much ego what you lose if this article beging live ? Is you lose money is you lose your life please stop doing this — Preceding unsigned comment added by 162.12.209.142 (talk) 14:10, 20 October 2019 (UTC) — Tripodandstudentcard (talk • contribs) is a confirmed sock puppet of Westrextravels (talk • contribs).
Thank you for your comments. Please note, new posts go at the bottom of the thread. . Thank you. Eagleash (talk) 14:28, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete and salt: Poorly-formatted and likely auto-biographical article on a subject with no indication of significant coverage from any reliable sources. It's also unlikely that anything has changed from the last AfD which was only a month ago. Should be salted since re-creation by sockpuppets is now a demonstrated issue. — MarkH21 (talk) 07:58, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete. My rationale from the previous discussion still holds true. Utopes (talk) 01:56, 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.
|
[
"Mr Dawar"
] |
62,111,287 |
Karsonya Wise Whitehead
|
Karsonya "Kaye" Wise Whitehead is an American educator, author, radio host, speaker, and documentary filmmaker who is known as the #blackmommyactivist. She is the founding director of The Karson Institute for Race, Peace, and Social Justice, a Professor of Communication and African and African American Studies at Loyola University Maryland, and the host of Today With Kaye on WEAA. Whitehead is also an Opinion Editorial columnist for the Baltimore Afro-American.
==Biography==
Whitehead received her B.A. from Lincoln University; her M.A. in International Peace Studies from the University of Notre Dame; her graduate degree in Advanced Documentary and Narrative Filmmaking from the New York Film Academy; and her Ph.D. in Language, Literacy, and Culture from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority.
Whitehead was a middle school teacher in Baltimore City. She was also a documentary filmmaker with Metro TV, a PBS-affiliate and a senior producer for Music Television Networks (MTV). In 2001, she directed and produced The Twin Towers: A History which was nominated for a New York Emmy Award, her third nomination.
Whitehead had served as the National Secretary for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), the National Secretary and as the National President (2020-2023) for the National Women's Studies Association (NWSA).
==Awards==
In 2020, Whitehead was selected by the Daily Record as one of Maryland's Top 100 Women; by the Baltimore Sun as the Best Radio Host. In 2019, Whitehead received the Collegium Visionary Award from the college of Holy Cross; the Exceptional Merit in Media Award (EMMA) from the National Women's Political Caucus for her work editing and compiling #BlackGirlActivism: Exploring the Ways We Come Though the Storm, a special issue of the Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism journal (Duke University Press); the Baltimore Sun named her as one of Baltimore's 25 "Women to Watch in 2019"; and, Essence magazine included her on the 2019 "Woke 100 List," of "black women advocating for change."
In 2021, Whitehead was named a "Leader in Diversity" by Baltimore Business Journal. In 2016, Whitehead received the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies' "Distinguished Alumni" Award from the University of Notre Dame. In 2014, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Progressive National Baptist Convention. In 2013, she received the Faculty Award for Excellence in Engaged Scholarship from Loyola University Maryland.
In 2021, Kaye received the Edward R. Murrow Regional Award in the inaugural category, Excellence in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (Region 12); 2021 Chesapeake Associated Press Award for Outstanding Editorial or Commentary; and, was selected by the Baltimore Business Journal to receive the Leaders in Diversity Award. She also received The Amistad Award for her contributions to human rights and social justice from the Amistad Committee.
==Writing==
Whitehead is a curriculum writer who created and compiled the crowd-sourced Trump Syllabus K12 curriculum: Lesson Plans for Teaching During this New Age of Resistance.
Whitehead is the author of four books including Letters for My Black Sons: Raising Boys in a Post-Racial America and Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis which was reviewed in Journal of American History. A documentary film The Women of Philadelphia was made about the book and it received both the 2015 Darlene Clark Hine Award from the Organization of American Historians and the 2014 Letitia Woods Brown Book Award from the Association of Black Women Historians.
|
[
"MTV",
"Baltimore Afro-American",
"National Women's Political Caucus",
"University of Maryland, Baltimore County",
"Lincoln University (Pennsylvania)",
"Edward R. Murrow Award (Radio Television Digital News Association)",
"College of the Holy Cross",
"National Women's Studies Association",
"ASALH",
"Master of Arts",
"Organization of American Historians",
"Association of Black Women Historians",
"Darlene Clark Hine Award",
"Essence (magazine)",
"Progressive National Baptist Convention",
"Baltimore Sun",
"YouTube",
"University of Notre Dame",
"Daily Record (Maryland)",
"Doctor of Philosophy",
"New York Emmy Award",
"Bachelor of Arts",
"New York Film Academy",
"Loyola University Maryland",
"Delta Sigma Theta",
"Duke University Press"
] |
62,111,293 |
North Macedonia at the 2020 Summer Paralympics
|
North Macedonia competed at the 2020 Summer Paralympics in Tokyo, Japan, from 24 August to 5 September 2021. This was their seventh consecutive appearance at the Summer Paralympics since 1996.
==Shooting==
North Macedonia entered one athletes into the Paralympic competition. Olivera Nakovska-Bikova successfully break the Paralympic qualification at the 2018 WSPS World Championships which was held in Cheongju, South Korea.
|
[
"2020 Summer Paralympics",
"Macedonian Paralympic Committee",
"North Macedonia at the 2020 Summer Olympics",
"Japan",
"Shooting at the 2020 Summer Paralympics – Mixed 25 metre pistol SH1",
"North Macedonia at the Paralympics",
"Flag of North Macedonia",
"Tokyo",
"North Macedonia",
"Olivera Nakovska-Bikova",
"Cheongju",
"1996 Summer Paralympics",
"South Korea",
"Summer Paralympics"
] |
62,111,324 |
Category:Covered bridges in Hunterdon County, New Jersey
|
Covered bridges in Hunterdon County, New Jersey.
|
[
"Hunterdon County, New Jersey"
] |
62,111,336 |
File:Atomic Heart cover.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"Atomic Heart (video game)"
] |
62,111,339 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Poing (video game)
|
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. Jo-Jo Eumerus (talk, contributions) 15:46, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Poing (video game)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Does not appear to have any reliable sources in existence indicating notability. flowing dreams (talk page) 12:07, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Video games-related deletion discussions. flowing dreams (talk page) 12:07, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete A clear failure of WP:GNG, as there are no multiple significant reliable and independent sources that cover the subject. Jovanmilic97 (talk) 12:51, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
I see the page was nominated for PROD by and then endorsed by . Jovanmilic97 (talk) 12:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment I removed the above mentioned prod on procedural grounds (previous prod in 2009), no opinion on notability. There probably is not much more RS coverage than mentioned in the article: I also found 1/3 page in the (Italian) Amiga Magazine (volume 5, issue 38, October 1992, p. 79; featured on their coverdisk) and similar or shorter articles in other Amiga magazines (eg. Amiga Format, issue 112, July 1998, p. 97; again on their coverdisk). Pavlor (talk) 16:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete contains only one reference to one page in a book. The lack of references fails to establish any notablility; clearly fails WP:GNG. Spy-cicle (talk) 16:41, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per above, fails WP:GNG. Videogameplayer99 (talk) 18:23, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
*Delete Contains only one reference and does not establish enough notability to warrant its own article. Fails WP:GNG Spy-cicle💥 Talk? 12:35, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Note you already "voted" delete 4 days ago... Pavlor (talk) 13:26, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Oh I must not have realised, thanks for letting me know, I will get rid of my second vote. Spy-cicle💥 Talk? 22:37, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"Poing (video game)",
"WP:RS"
] |
62,111,343 |
List of ships named Pearl
|
Many ships have been named Pearl including:
The Pearl, a schooner in the Pearl incident, an 1848 slave escape attempt
, a cruise ship built in 1967
, a cruiseferry operated by DFDS Seaways (Seaways' Pearl cruise-ferry)
, a Norwegian Cruise Lines cruise ship built in 2006
, an X-Press Feeders containership that sank off Sri Lanka in 2021
, the name of several Royal Navy ships
, the name of more than one United States Navy ship
|
[
"Pearl (disambiguation)",
"Pearl incident",
"Black Pearl"
] |
62,111,345 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/re.tc
|
== Links ==
re.tc resolves to [//104.27.190.167 104.27.190.167]
re.tc is hosted on retargetlinks.com
retargetlinks.com resolves to [//104.18.54.201 104.18.54.201]
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 \bre\.tc\b
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 2 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,111,350 |
Jurca MJ-54 Silas
|
The Jurca MJ-54 Silas is a two-seat light touring cargo aircraft designed by Marcel Jurca to enable a small car to be transported along with the pilot and passenger.
==Origins==
The aircraft came from an idea by Arthur-Joseph Torossian in 1992, who wanted a touring aircraft which could carry a very small vehicle, such as the Aixam Microcar, for use at remote airfields, and which could also be used as sleeping accommodation with the car removed. The car could also act as an aircraft tug at airports. He envisioned it as a combination of a Max Holste Broussard and a Transall C.160. He saw many other uses for the aircraft, including as an air ambulance, carrier for four parachutists, disabled persons carrier, or freighter. Torossian envisaged a market for 1000 aircraft, and during the development of the prototype was looking for a company to mass-produce it. In 2000 he was awarded the French Union of Inventors' prize for the best invention.
==Development==
The well-known designer of wooden homebuilt aircraft, Marcel Jurca was enlisted to design the prototype. Construction was started at Cerny Aerodrome, La Ferté-Alais by Torossian and a group of friends, who together formed a group known as the Association Tegas, a reversal of the surname of Dassault test pilot Jean-Marie Saget. but this may have just consisted of a few hops along the runway. Development was slow, and a public presentation was not held until 16 January 2002 at La Ferté-Alais. Apparently, obtaining a permit to fly was difficult because of the fuel in the car's tank. Joseph Torossian had great problems getting finance for production. A planned promotional tour of French flying clubs seems not to have taken place, and little happened since. The prototype remains stored at the airfield.
==Design==
The MJ-54 is a high-wing monoplane of wooden construction, with two seats accessed by two gull-wing doors. The cockpit was designed with touring comfort in mind. The fuselage is a box structure with a rear loading ramp up which a small car can be driven, or other freight loaded. The centre of gravity changes little, whether loaded or unloaded. It has a cantilever wing. The horizontal tailplane is attached to the underside of a rear boom, with twin fins and rudders on the tips. It has a fixed tricycle undercarriage.
==Specifications (MJ-54)==
==Footnotes==
|
[
"centre of gravity",
"Jean-Marie Saget",
"Transall C.160",
"Max Holste Broussard",
"flying club",
"Aixam",
"monoplane",
"gull-wing doors",
"Lycoming Engines",
"tricycle undercarriage",
"cockpit",
"France",
"fuselage",
"tailplane",
"La Ferté-Alais",
"Marcel Jurca",
"cantilever"
] |
62,111,355 |
Centro Deportivo Municipal Moratalaz
|
The Centro Deportivo Municipal Moratalaz, also known as the Polideportivo de Moratalaz, is a sports complex located in the Moratalaz district of Madrid, Spain. The 108.3 m² facility in the Pavones ward includes the following sports venues: an athletics track, an outdoor football pitch, three indoor soccer courts, two fronton courts for basque pelota, a handball court, six tennis courts, a beach volleyball court, and outdoor and an indoor swimming pool, an archery range, an ice rink for skating, and a multi-use indoor sports hall. It also as facilities to support padel, rhythmic gymnastics and bodybuilding.
An annual track and field event, the Meeting de Atletismo Madrid, is hosted at the athletics stadium, which had a blue track installed in 2014. The competition has regularly been a part of the IAAF World Challenge series since 2010, was an IAAF Grand Prix level meeting from 2006 to 2009, and was an IAAF Super Grand Prix meeting from 2003 to 2005. It has also hosted IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge events regularly since 2010.
|
[
"Spain",
"sport of athletics",
"padel (sport)",
"bodybuilding",
"rhythmic gymnastics",
"Moratalaz",
"Community of Madrid",
"Meeting de Atletismo Madrid",
"tennis court",
"basque pelota",
"Madrid",
"handball",
"football pitch",
"Fronton (court)",
"track and field",
"Pavones",
"archery",
"IAAF Super Grand Prix",
"swimming (sport)",
"IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge",
"IAAF Grand Prix",
"ice rink",
"indoor soccer",
"IAAF World Challenge",
"beach volleyball",
"sports complex"
] |
62,111,365 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Heather Rouba
|
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. RL0919 (talk) 19:29, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Heather Rouba===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Created by COI account and tagged for notability since 2010. Lacks reliable independent sources and not notable. Mccapra (talk) 12:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Beauty pageants-related deletion discussions. Mccapra (talk) 12:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Oklahoma-related deletion discussions. Mccapra (talk) 12:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete even the winners of major state titles like Miss Oklahoma and Miss Oklahoma USA are not default notable, minor competitiions like Mrs. Oklahoma do not even come close to propelling their winners to notability.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Women-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:06, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Does not describe achievements for which notability is inherent. I cannot find sources that aren't local so does not have the WP:RS to satisfy WP:GNG or WP:BIO. -Lopifalko (talk) 18:05, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete. Fails WP:GNG. She's just a state pageant winner and otherwise leads a productive but rather ordinary life per this recent local news article: .4meter4 (talk) 19:03, 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:BIO",
"WP:GNG",
"WP:RS",
"Heather Rouba"
] |
62,111,373 |
Golden Princess
|
Golden Princess may refer to:
Golden Princess (ship), one of several ships
Golden Princess (2020 film), a Burmese drama film
Golden Princess Film Production, a Hong Kong film production company
The Golden Princess, a 1925 American silent drama film
|
[
"Golden Princess (2020 film)",
"Golden Princess (ship)",
"The Golden Princess",
"Golden Princess Film Production",
"Four Golden Princess"
] |
62,111,389 |
Category:Covered bridges in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania
|
Covered bridges in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania.
|
[
"Clearfield County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,392 |
Category:Bridges in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania
|
Bridges in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania
|
[
"Clearfield County, Pennsylvania"
] |
62,111,422 |
Queen's Hill Estate
|
{{Infobox housing project
| building name = Queen's Hill Estate
| image = 2021年9月-皇后山邨A.jpg
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption = Queen's Hill Estate
| image_caption =
| location = 66 Lung Ma Road, Kwan TeiFanlingNew Territories, Hong Kong
| coordinates =
| status = Completed
| category = Public rental housing
| demolished =
| area =
| population date =
| population =
| blocknumber = 7
| units = 8,865 It consists of seven residential blocks completed in 2021.
Shan Lai Court () is a Home Ownership Scheme court in Kwan Tei, near Queen's Hill Estate. It consists of six residential blocks completed in 2021.
The site occupies about and comprises seven Public Rental Housing (PRH) blocks and six Subsidised Sale Flats (SSF) blocks, with the provision of retail facilities, car parks, community and social welfare facilities, educational facilities, bus terminus and ancillary transport facilities. It will provide in stages a total of 8,865 PRH flats and 3,222 SSF flats for a population of around 34,500 people.
==Houses==
===Queen's Hill Estate===
==Politics==
Queen's Hill Estate and Shan Lai Court are located in Queen's Hill constituency of the North District Council. It is currently represented by Law Ting-tak, who was elected in the 2019 elections.
|
[
"Hong Kong Housing Authority",
"Electoral Affairs Commission",
"Fanling",
"Law Ting-tak",
"public housing estate",
"New Territories",
"Kwan Tei",
"private university",
"Government of Hong Kong",
"North District Council",
"2019 Hong Kong local elections",
"Home Ownership Scheme",
"Queen's Hill (constituency)",
"British Forces Overseas Hong Kong",
"Public housing estates in Fanling"
] |
62,111,423 |
Trick (2019 film)
|
{{Infobox film
| image = Trick (2019 film).jpg
| alt = A hooded teen wears a Halloween skull mask.
| caption = Theatrical film poster
| director = Patrick Lussier
| writer =
| producer =
| starring =
| cinematography = Amanda Treyz
| editing = Tommy Aagaard
| music = Michael Wandmacher
| studio =
Trick is a 2019 slasher film directed by Patrick Lussier, who co-wrote with Todd Farmer. The film stars Omar Epps, Ellen Adair, Kristina Reyes, Jamie Kennedy, and Tom Atkins. The story follows a detective who is pursuing a killer that only appears in his town during Halloween. It released in the United States on October 18, 2019, to negative reviews.
==Plot==
In 2015 in Benton, New York, high school senior Patrick "Trick" Weaver is playing spin the bottle at a Halloween party using a knife with "TRICK" and "TREAT" carved into opposite sides of the handle when it lands on another boy. The other players tease Trick, telling him to kiss the other boy. Trick grabs the knife and stabs five teens to death before being stabbed with a fire poker. At the hospital, Det. Mike Denver wishes to remove the Halloween face paint hiding Trick's face but Trick flips the hospital bed and escapes, slaughtering people throughout the hospital using surgical equipment. Det. Mike Denver and Sheriff Lisa Jayne shoot Trick several times and he falls out of a window onto the road below but then disappears into the river. During police interviews, Troy states that he stabbed Trick with the poker but the students provide contradictory descriptions of Trick's appearance. No one has ever met Trick's parents, Trick's registered address turns out to be a dockyard, and the two-faced pumpkin mask that Trick was wearing at the party disappears from evidence.
In 2016, Trick uses the same knife to kill students and teachers at a high school Halloween dance in Riverton, New York. In 2017, more bodies are found at a Halloween party in Hudson Village, New York. On October 30, 2018, Det. Denver warns two agents in Shady Creek, New York that Trick could attack there because they are located along the same river where all of his attacks have occurred. While in a bar, Trick surprises them and kills the two agents.
On October 30, 2019, Trick leaves the message "DENVER" in blood at a murder site in Benton. The next day a masked Trick surprises the now unemployed Denver outside his car and is chased through the cemetery before disappearing. Trick fakes text messages from Denver to lure Deputy Green to the old crane barge, where he injures her with a booby trap then kills her by using a crane to swing a gravestone through the windshield where she is sitting. Sheriff Jayne notes that the gravestone belongs to Agent Christina Mendez, whom Trick killed the previous year. Trick begins killing people in Talbott's haunted maze. Cheryl, a survivor of the original killings in 2015, sees Trick wielding the carved knife. Trick stabs Nicki so Det. Denver sends her to the hospital and Cheryl accompanies her, where Cheryl finds that Trick has killed her hospitalized father. Troy confesses to Det. Denver that Cheryl was the one who stabbed Trick with the fire poker, so Det. Denver and Sheriff Jayne rush to the hospital and find Cheryl held captive by Trick. Trick stabs Det. Denver and Sheriff Jayne multiple times before Cheryl shoots him. When Trick seems unaffected, Det. Denver jumps with Trick out the window onto a car.
Multiple individuals wearing Trick's face paint arrive and Det. Denver realizes that a group of devotees have been carrying out the bidding of the real Patrick Weaver, who arrives in a wheelchair and joins the others in stabbing Det. Denver. Cheryl arrives and notices the scar on the stomach of a nearby man in a wheelchair, whom she pursues back into the hospital. She sees him discard a pumpkin mask into the garbage and begin deleting the hospital's video surveillance footage. Patrick lets her into the room, where they struggle before she uses her self-defense training to use the knife against him and stab him in the stomach. Patrick dies after wheezing out his final words "one of us". Deputy Slater tells Sheriff Jayne that Det. Denver was stabbed to death but Sheriff Jayne notices some face paint remaining on his cheek. Slater attacks her but Cheryl uses the carved knife to stab him. Sheriff Jayne takes the knife from her and stabs him again. The remaining devotees of Trick travel onward to recruit more followers while Cheryl, Sheriff Jayne, and Det. Denver continue to track and pursue them.
==Cast==
Jamie Kennedy as Dr. Steven
Omar Epps as Det. Mike Denver
Tom Atkins as Talbott
Alex Breaux as Len
Ellen Adair as Lisa Jayne, Sheriff of Benton County
Vanessa Aspillaga as Agent Tina Mendez
Kristina Reyes as Cheryl Winston
Thom Niemann as Patrick Weaver
Todd Farmer as Deputy Wan
Gary J. Tunnicliffe as Principal
Aaron Dalla Villa as Smooth Johnny
Dani Shay as Deputy Green
Summer Crockett Moore as Patricia Denver
Hillary Greer as Nurse Helen
Jérôme Charvet as Deputy Slater
Melody Hu as Janice
Sasha Diamond as Deputy Iris Reddick
Robert G. McKay as Agent Swift
Adrienne Rose Bengtsson as Brooke
Allen Wall as Short Scared Ghost
Kya Brickhouse as Nicki
Max Miller as Troy
Raith Kell as Thomas the Orderly
Kevin A. Wall as Diner Client
Tony Mitchell as Chief Gunn
Robert M. Jimenez as Cheryl's Dad
Ana-Maria Corizo as Cheryl's Mother
Austin Ferris as Student
==Production==
Dermot Mulroney was originally cast to play Det. Mike Denver but Omar Epps ended up playing the role in the film.
Filming took place in Middletown, Beacon, and Warwick, New York, as well as the Umbra Sound Stages in Newburgh, New York.
==Release==
Trick was released in limited theaters in the United States on October 18, 2019. It later released on home media that same year on December 17. Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter called Trick "a slasher film with a dull edge" and wrote that "the film goes down an extremely predictable path, mainly buying time between killing sprees". Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com gave the film 1½, calling it "more incoherent than terrifying". Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting wrote that "it’s clear that Lussier and Farmer are operating at a sub-standard level" and that "at every level, from technical to story, Trick is a joyless affair."
The film earned $48,953 at the international box office, specifically from the United Arab Emirates.
|
[
"Warwick, New York",
"Patrick Lussier",
"spin the bottle",
"Jamie Kennedy",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"RogerEbert.com",
"The Hollywood Reporter",
"Newburgh, New York",
"Jérôme Charvet",
"RLJE Films",
"List of films set around Halloween",
"Tom Atkins (actor)",
"Beacon, New York",
"Gary J. Tunnicliffe",
"Middletown, Orange County, New York",
"Dermot Mulroney",
"The Numbers (website)",
"Fandango Media",
"Riverton, New York",
"Omar Epps",
"Benton, New York",
"slasher film",
"Box Office Mojo",
"Bloody Disgusting",
"Todd Farmer",
"Michael Wandmacher",
"Kristina Reyes",
"Filmaffinity"
] |
62,111,427 |
Template:Lists of Football Clubs in English Counties
|
[
"List of football clubs in Somerset",
"List of football clubs in Derbyshire",
"List of football clubs in Cumbria",
"List of football clubs in Lancashire",
"List of football clubs in North Yorkshire",
"List of football clubs in Warwickshire",
"List of football clubs in East Sussex",
"List of football clubs in Dorset",
"List of football clubs in Merseyside",
"List of football clubs in Buckinghamshire",
"List of football clubs in Oxfordshire",
"List of football clubs in Staffordshire",
"List of football clubs in Bedfordshire",
"Football in London",
"List of football clubs in Essex",
"List of football clubs in West Sussex",
"List of football clubs in Greater Manchester",
"List of football clubs in Gloucestershire",
"List of football clubs in Suffolk",
"List of football clubs in Leicestershire",
"List of football clubs in Bristol",
"List of football clubs in Rutland",
"List of football clubs in the West Midlands",
"List of football clubs in Devon",
"List of football clubs in Kent",
"List of football clubs in Nottinghamshire",
"List of football clubs in Shropshire",
"List of football clubs in Lincolnshire",
"List of football clubs in Worcestershire",
"List of football clubs in Berkshire",
"List of football clubs in Cheshire",
"List of football clubs in Cambridgeshire",
"List of football clubs in Herefordshire",
"List of football clubs in Hampshire",
"List of football clubs in the Isle of Wight",
"List of football clubs in Hertfordshire",
"List of football clubs in Norfolk",
"List of football clubs in Northamptonshire",
"List of football clubs in Surrey",
"List of football clubs in Northumberland",
"List of football clubs in South Yorkshire",
"List of football clubs in Wiltshire",
"List of football clubs in County Durham",
"List of football clubs in Tyne and Wear",
"List of football clubs in West Yorkshire",
"List of football clubs in the East Riding of Yorkshire",
"List of football clubs in Cornwall"
] |
|
62,111,431 |
Category:Lists of political families
|
[] |
|
62,111,432 |
Fish-Baughman House
|
The Fish-Baughman House is a one-story, frame, California Ranch-style house at 3436 E. Ranch View Dr. in Millcreek, Utah. It was built in 1955 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.
|
[
"Cliff May",
"National Park Service",
"National Register of Historic Places",
"contributing building",
"Millcreek, Utah"
] |
62,111,437 |
Majami'al-Hadb Reserve
|
Majami'al-Hadb Reserve is a protected area in Saudi Arabia managed by the Saudi Wildlife Authority.
== Overview ==
The 3400 km² protected area is situated to the north of Najd in central Saudi Arabia. The animal species inhabiting this reserve are the Arabian wolf, Ruppell's fox, ratel, hare, rock hyrax, caracal, and mongoose.
|
[
"Rüppell's fox",
"Saudi Arabia",
"caracal",
"hare",
"List of protected areas of Saudi Arabia",
"Arabian wolf",
"Najd",
"mongoose",
"Saudi Wildlife Authority",
"Honey badger",
"rock hyrax"
] |
62,111,444 |
Walsh v Jones Lang Lasalle Ltd
|
Walsh v Jones Lang Lasalle Ltd [2017] IESC 38, is a decision of the Irish Supreme Court in which the court held that a purchaser bears the risk of reliance on erroneous information unless the vendor has clearly assumed responsibility for its accuracy. In reaching this decision, the court clarified the law in Ireland "in relation to the effect of statements disclaiming liability in actions claiming negligent misstatement."
== Background ==
David Walsh (the plaintiff in the original trial and the respondent in the Supreme Court appeal) was in search of a premises for his business management training. The court referred to the case of Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd where it was established that "the author of a statement could, in certain circumstances, be liable for financial loss caused by it to a person relying on it". as relevant. In McCullagh, an estate agent had represented (both orally and in written particulars of the property) the price of the site. After purchasing the property, the plaintiff discovered that the plot site was only approximately half this size and sued the estate agent in negligence. The estate agents relied upon a disclaimer in their particulars document. Laffoy J cited with approval Hobhouse L.J.'s judgment in which it was noted that “[t]he relevance of the disclaimer is to negative one of the essential elements for the existence of the duty of care and negatives the assumption of responsibility for the statement”. Laffoy J also went on to note that the “right approach as is made clear in Hedley Byrne, is to treat the existence of the disclaimer as one of the facts relevant to answering the question whether there had been an assumption of responsibility by the defendants for the relevant statement”.
Laffoy J. therefore determined that the High Court had failed to adequately consider the significance of the disclaimer where the appellant made it clear that details in the brochure were not warranted. O'Donnell J. concluded that the High Court had erred in "running together the analysis of a claim for a negligent act (incorrect measurement of the floor area of the property) and a claim for negligent misstatement (contained in the particulars of the property in the brochure) leading to the assumption that there existed a duty of care and, only then, looking to the disclaimer to consider whether it was sufficient to exclude that presumed duty of care." O'Donnell J. held that the approach of the High Court was more appropriate to the consideration of an exemption clause that seeks to limit a contractual liability that was already extant. The context of negligent misstatement is different from the principles in Hedley Byrne.
O'Donnell J, Laffoy J (O'Malley J concurring) therefore concluded that there had been no assumption of responsibility on the part of the appellant in relation to the task of "furnishing accurate internal measurements and, consequently, no duty of care arose". As the court noted "an effective disclaimer of responsibility prevents the “proximity” ingredient of the existence of a duty of care being established." Where the person "giving the information in so doing has expressly included a disclaimer in the brochure or advertisement, ... the core issue in determining whether a duty of care exists is whether the existence of the disclaimer by reference to its terms has the effect that there is no assumption of responsibility for the task of furnishing correct information on the part of the estate agent giving the information to the recipient." In the present case, the disclaimer, when read objectively and as a whole was "clear and unambiguous as to non-assumption by [the appellants] of responsibility for the correctness of the particulars."
=== Minority / dissenting judgments ===
MacMenamin J and McKechnie J concluded that the appellant did owe the respondent a duty of care and that the appeal should be dismissed.
MacMenamin J. focused on the substance of the disclaimer. He noted that if the disclaimer in the brochure had been clear and appropriate, then it would have been "sufficient to exonerate the firm from liability." However, he distinguished McCullagh, as the terms of the disclaimer in McCullagh “were crystal clear”, something that could not be said for the disclaimer in the appellant's brochure. MacMenamin J. therefore concluded that the trial judge was correct in finding that the disclaimer "carried with it a representation from a firm of the highest integrity that every care had been taken in preparing the brochure". The judge went on to note that the trial judge had "concluded on cogent evidence that the information given was for a specific purpose, actually made known to the purchaser, in circumstances where the firm should have known that the information would be relied on, and acted upon" - "on the facts that the remainder of the disclaimer had no legal efficacy."
=== Conclusion ===
On the basis of the majority decision, the appeal was allowed.
|
[
"Donoghue v Stevenson",
"Coat of arms of Ireland",
"Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd",
"House of Lords",
"JLL (company)",
"Supreme Court of Ireland",
"Negligence"
] |
62,111,447 |
Michael Duffy (equestrian)
|
Michael Paul Duffy (born 12 October 1994) is an Irish showjumper. Michael is currently the youngest Irish Senior Irish National Showjumping Champion. He started his career in Galway, Ireland under the training and Guidance of his father Paul Duffy , International Course builder and former International Show-jumper.
Michael rode horses for Olympic Bronze Medalist Cian O'Connor whilst on UAE Tour before moving to West Sussex to ride alongside Irish rider Shane Breen.
|
[
"Turloughmore",
"Cian O'Connor",
"Shane Breen",
"West Sussex",
"Show jumping",
"showjumper"
] |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.