page_id
int64 12
2.54M
| title
stringlengths 1
261
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753k
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listlengths 0
29.9k
|
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62,112,070 |
Donna Santisi
|
Donna Santisi is an American photographer. Her work has appeared in Slash, New York Rocker and Creem.
==Career==
Santisi first became interested in photography in college. She saw Janis Joplin multiple times and the desire grew to document the experience. Santisi received a BS in Business Administration from Rider University but after experiencing the punk scene of Los Angeles Santisi devoted herself to photography.
Santisi shot the cover for The Cramps's album Psychedelic Jungle, and Learning to Crawl by The Pretenders, among other album covers and sleeve inserts.
Santisi is predominately a nature photographer now.
|
[
"Los Angeles",
"Kelly Johnson (guitarist)",
"The Cramps",
"The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads",
"The Rascals",
"The Pretenders",
"Talking Heads",
"Business administration",
"Alice Bag",
"Psychedelic Jungle",
"Punk Globe",
"New wave music",
"New York Rocker",
"Rider University",
"Creem",
"The Shangri-Las",
"Janis Joplin",
"Learning to Crawl",
"Slash (fanzine)",
"Discogs"
] |
62,112,072 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/my.namejeff.com
|
== Links ==
my.namejeff.com resolves to [//192.187.99.3 192.187.99.3]
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 2 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,074 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/my.namejeff.com
|
== Links ==
my.namejeff.com resolves to [//192.187.99.3 192.187.99.3]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 2 additions out of 2 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/my.namejeff.com
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bmy\.namejeff\.com\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/my.namejeff.com]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 14:18, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/my.namejeff.com",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,075 |
Ten-thousand-flower Camellia
|
The Ten-thousand-flower Camellia is a Camellia reticulata tree at Jade Peak Temple, near the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in China. The plant is reputed to be over 500 years old.
It is not clear if two varieties have been grafted onto a single stock, or if the stock variety also shows in the flowering.
In a nearby courtyard a pair of Michelia yunnanensis, some 120 years old, have been trained in a similar formation.
|
[
"Camellia reticulata",
"Jade Dragon Snow Mountain",
"Michelia yunnanensis",
"Jade Peak Temple"
] |
62,112,088 |
Ten Thousand Flower Camellia
|
Redirect Ten-thousand-flower Camellia
|
[
"Ten-thousand-flower Camellia"
] |
62,112,098 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/fizfy.com
|
== Links ==
fizfy.com resolves to [//185.224.138.75 185.224.138.75]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 4 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,100 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/fizfy.com
|
== Links ==
fizfy.com resolves to [//185.224.138.75 185.224.138.75]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 4 additions out of 4 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/fizfy.com
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bfizfy\.com\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/fizfy.com]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 14:23, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 20:40, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/fizfy.com",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,117 |
Levash
|
Levash may refer to several localities in Russia:
A rural locality in Babushkinsky District, Vologda Oblast
Levash, Totemsky District, Vologda Oblast
Levash, Nyuksensky District, Vologda Oblast
|
[
"List of rural localities in Vologda Oblast",
"Levash, Nyuksensky District, Vologda Oblast",
"Levash, Totemsky District, Vologda Oblast"
] |
62,112,119 |
Christian Wein
|
Christian Wein (born 6 June 1979) is a German field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Barcelona",
"field hockey"
] |
62,112,127 |
File:Reverend guitars logo.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,112,131 |
File:Teacher of the year film.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,112,132 |
Ulrich Moissl
|
Ulrich Moissl (born 2 January 1974) is a German field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"field hockey",
"Vienna"
] |
62,112,133 |
Category:Book series introduced in 1931
|
[] |
|
62,112,147 |
Cyclone (Vinyl)
|
"Cyclone" is the sixth episode of the American period drama television series Vinyl. The episode was written by Carl Capotorto and Erin Cressida Wilson and directed by Nicole Kassell. It originally aired on HBO on March 20, 2016.
The series is set in New York City in the 1970s. It focuses on Richie Finestra, American Century Records founder and president, whose passion for music and discovering talent has gone by the wayside. With his American Century Records on the verge of being sold, a life-altering event rekindles Finestra's professional fire, but it may leave his personal life in ruins. In the episode, Richie desperately tries to find Devon, with the help of an old friend.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 0.570 million household viewers and gained a 0.21 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received generally positive reviews from critics, with praise towards the performances and tone, but criticism for Richie's character. Many also expressed disdain for the episode's twist, with some feeling it was predictable and a weak narrative choice.
==Plot==
Richie (Bobby Cannavale) is worried about Devon (Olivia Wilde), as she has lost all contact with him. His old friend, Ernst (Carrington Vilmont), suggests he should abandon his marriage and have sex with anyone. Devon is revealed to have gone to the Chelsea Hotel, staying with Ingrid (Birgitte Hjort Sørensen), an old friend from her Warhol days.
Andie (Annie Parisse) has started working at American Century, surprising Zak (Ray Romano). Ray also threatens Kip (James Jagger) in selecting his new guitarist, warning him he could drop him if he does not comply. When Ernst claims to have found where Devon is, Richie goes to Max's Kansas City. He runs into Warhol (John Cameron Mitchell) and attacks him when he suspects he is hiding Devon. Richie and Ernst then escape and hide in a car in the suburbs.
The following morning, Richie wakes and hurriedly attends Zak's daughter's bat mitzvah, only to arrive at the end of the ceremony. Fed up with his behavior, Zak punches him, calling him out for his behavior and ruining his family. Richie then returns home, finding Devon already there. Richie promises to be a better person and stop using drugs, but Devon gets angry when he mentions he was talking to Ernst. As Richie takes a shower, Devon decides to leave the house with their children. Ernst promises to help Richie in finding her again, but Richie eventually realizes that Ernst is not real. In a flashback, it is revealed that Richie was recklessly driving a car with Devon, Ingrid and Ernst, Ingrid's boyfriend, on their way to the Coney Island Cyclone. The car gets into a car crash, killing Ernst and causing a pregnant Devon to miscarry.
==Production==
===Development===
In March 2016, HBO announced that the sixth episode of the series would be titled "Cyclone", and that it would be written by Carl Capotorto and Erin Cressida Wilson, and directed by Nicole Kassell. This was Capotorto's first writing credit, Wilson's first writing credit, and Kassell's first directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
In its original American broadcast, "Cyclone" was seen by an estimated 0.570 million household viewers with a 0.21 in the 18–49 demographics. This means that 0.21 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 8% decrease in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.618 million household viewers with a 0.21 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Cyclone" received generally positive reviews from critics. Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.2 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'Cyclone' brought Richie down to (I'm assuming) the lowest he could get. Which was good. If you're going to go all the way, go all the way. Now comes the rebuilding process, hopefully, and less of the self-destructive pattern that's grown tiresome. And because this episode felt like the start of a turning point, it landed a lot better than previous entries."
Dan Caffrey of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B–" grade and wrote, "Once writers Carl Capotorto and Erin Cressida Wilson add a traumatic car accident to the mix, the wild grimness becomes somehow more unbelievable than it already was. But even among the clichés; even among the deceitful ghost sidekick, Richie's stereotypically dark HBO protagonist, and Devon's oppressed artist-turned-housewife, 'Cyclone' at least has some alluring visuals and a glimpse of salvation that's far more interesting than any of the hedonism has been so far."
Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Poor Ernst, even deader than Buck Rogers — and poor Richie, who might finally be realizing just how deep this mess he's made has taken him down." Noel Murray of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Even at its most aggravating, Vinyl maintains a certain surface appeal, too polished to dismiss. To paraphrase 'Chelsea Hotel' and Leonard Cohen: It's ugly, but it has the music."
Gavin Edwards of The New York Times criticized the twist by writing, "any viewer who is surprised to discover that Ernst is actually a cocaine-induced hallucination was probably also shocked at the end of each episode of Scooby-Doo. The problem is not just that the plot twist is hackneyed, it's that it's hard to care about one more manifestation of Richie’s cocaine problem." Dan Martin of The Guardian wrote, "Vinyls at its strongest when it makes the most of its setting, weaker when doing the generic anti-hero stuff and little else. This episode, 'Cyclone', made the most of both."
Tony Sokol of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "The Cyclone is the scariest ride on Coney Island. It doesn't have the deepest dips or the most dangerous curves. What makes the Cyclone so scary is that it looks like it can fall apart at any moment. That's what Richie Finestra looks like in Vinyls 'Cyclone' episode. This guy is falling apart." Robert Ham of Paste wrote, "I was cold on her storyline from the start, but I'm learning to really enjoy her journey of self-discovery and self-reliance, as she pushes away from her crazed home life and back into the art world that she left behind to raise a family. I'm also starting to appreciate the trials of the Nasty Bits, and the welcome thrill of the scene where Kip finds a new lead guitarist for the band. The rest of the episode? Not so great."
|
[
"The Champs",
"Little Richard",
"Vinyl (TV series)",
"Griffin Newman",
"Carl Capotorto",
"I Saw Her Standing There",
"Here Comes the Night",
"The Stooges",
"MacKenzie Meehan",
"Hotel Chelsea",
"Den of Geek",
"HBO",
"Paste (magazine)",
"Ray Romano",
"Suffragette City",
"Douglas Smith (actor)",
"Susan Heyward",
"Coney Island Cyclone",
"IGN",
"The King and I (Vinyl)",
"Miscarriage",
"The A.V. Club",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"The Beatles",
"Bar and bat mitzvah",
"Reed Morano",
"Andy Warhol",
"Oh Me Oh My (I'm a Fool for You Baby)",
"Rave On",
"Armando Riesco",
"Bobby Cannavale",
"The Guardian",
"Annie Parisse",
"With a Girl Like You",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Nicole Kassell",
"John Cameron Mitchell",
"Erin Cressida Wilson",
"Olivia Wilde",
"Keep A-Knockin'",
"He in Racist Fire",
"Vulture (website)",
"Buddy Holly",
"David Bowie",
"The Troggs",
"Emily Tremaine",
"Historical drama",
"Them (band)",
"Tequila (The Champs song)",
"Birgitte Hjort Sørensen",
"Noah Bean",
"Max's Kansas City",
"Lulu (singer)"
] |
62,112,148 |
The King and I (Vinyl)
|
"The King and I" is the seventh episode of the American period drama television series Vinyl. The episode was written by David Matthews and directed by Allen Coulter. It originally aired on HBO on March 27, 2016.
The series is set in New York City in the 1970s. It focuses on Richie Finestra, American Century Records founder and president, whose passion for music and discovering talent has gone by the wayside. With his American Century Records on the verge of being sold, a life-altering event rekindles Finestra's professional fire, but it may leave his personal life in ruins. In the episode, Richie and Zak travel to Los Angeles to sell the company jet, before heading for Las Vegas to sign Elvis Presley.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 0.666 million household viewers and gained a 0.22 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received generally positive reviews from critics, praising the focus on the Vegas storyline and performances, but criticizing Richie's characterization.
==Plot==
A sober Richie (Bobby Cannavale) travels to Los Angeles to sell the company jet to another executive, accompanied by Zak (Ray Romano). After completing the sale, the executive, Lou Meshejian (John Ventimiglia), invites them to a party at his beach house.
Jamie (Juno Temple) is informed by her mother, Mrs. Fineman (Lena Olin), that she will get evicted from her building unless she gets a new profession. At a restaurant, Joe Corso (Bo Dietl) salutes Corrado (Armen Garo) by his gangster position, embarrassing him in front of the patrons. Unaware to them, this is overheard by Detective Whorisky (Jason Cottle).
At the party, Richie and Zak discover that Elvis Presley (Shawn Klush) plans to leave RCA Victor following a gig in Las Vegas. They decide to visit Las Vega to try to get Presley to sign with American Century. They meet with Colonel Tom Parker (Gene Jones), who gives them tickets to a performance. However, Zak is unimpressed with Presley and both decide to leave. Noticing the number "18" in many places, Richie retreats to a casino, where he uses the number in many games, winning multiple times. While Zak pushes him to continue betting, Richie decides to leave after winning $5,000.
Richie meets with Presley at his suite, almost convincing him in signing. However, Parker interrupts the meeting and manipulates Presley in attacking Richie, before ordering him to leave the suite. The following morning, Richie finds that Zak slept with two women, but the women ended up robbing them the $90,000 from the jet sale. While angry with Zak, Richie forgives him and they return to New York. However, it is revealed that the money was actually gambled by Richie after listening "18 Yellow Roses", only to lose it at a roulette. On the airplane back to New York, Richie once again sees the "18" number.
==Production==
===Development===
In March 2016, HBO announced that the seventh episode of the series would be titled "The King and I", and that it would be written by David Matthews, and directed by Allen Coulter. This was Matthews' first writing credit, and Coulter's second directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
In its original American broadcast, "The King and I" was seen by an estimated 0.666 million household viewers with a 0.22 in the 18–49 demographics. This means that 0.22 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 16% increase in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.570 million household viewers with a 0.21 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"The King and I" received generally positive reviews from critics. Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'The King and I' managed to avoid some of the usual Vinyl pitfalls by giving the spotlight over to Richie and Zak so that one basic story could be told, and told well. It also helped that, at least for one episode, we got a clear-headed (relatively speaking) Richie who wasn't out to raise hell or drown himself in drugs. This cleared the path for some differently-styled drama and a fun scene with Elvis."
Dan Caffrey of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B–" grade and wrote, "After the credits are phased out by the static and heavenly chords of the Home Box Office logo, Terence Winter refers to 'The King And I' as 'Richie's experiment with sobriety' in the post-show interview. Maybe it's unfair to read so far into Winter's words, but I can't help but think it's just more proof that he and the writers of Vinyl are aggressively trying to make their protagonist as horrible as possible. I can't help but think it proves that the only reason 'The King And I' functions as a redemption song for so much of its runtime is so Richie can backslide into shittiness at the very end."
Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "So he's the one who lost it all, and 'going to go ahead and let Zak kill himself with guilt about it anyway. In other words, he's still as Richie as he's ever been. And now he's downing Smirnoff on the airplane like it's a magic roofie that will let him forget. All it does, though, is leave a wet spot on his Maslow in the shape of — yep, a 1 and an 8." Noel Murray of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Still, after two straight weeks of Vinyl repeating the same flat, shrill notes, it's reinvigorating to see a plot with an arc that actually goes places."
Gavin Edwards of The New York Times wrote, "This episode suggests that Vinyl is at its best when it's unencumbered by Richie's substance abuse and domestic drama — and when it doesn't take itself too seriously." Dan Martin of The Guardian wrote, "This week's life lesson? We're all just one disastrous business meeting with Elvis Presley away from sinking to new depths of moral depravity. Bizarrely, this is the situation in which Vinyl finds itself: the dafter things get, the more likeable they become."
Tony Sokol of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Richie Finestra would have found them a perfect fit for Alibi Records. He is a punk. He will head bang before the series ends. So let it be written, so let it be done, as Andrea Zito might say." Robert Ham of Paste wrote, "For most TV series, it usually takes a few seasons before they toss in a jump to another setting in hopes of catching viewers off-guard and drumming up some inspiration in the writers' room. With Vinyl, it only took them seven episodes to truck Richie and Zak off to L.A. and Vegas in hopes of regaining their lustre. It's a tired, tired trope. Almost as tiresome as the parade of familiar names and signposts that the writers weave into each storyline just so we know that, hey man, they get it."
|
[
"Allen Coulter",
"Funk 49",
"Los Angeles",
"Cyclone (Vinyl)",
"roulette",
"Vinyl (TV series)",
"Big Chief",
"Do It Again (Steely Dan song)",
"The Isley Brothers",
"Griffin Newman",
"MacKenzie Meehan",
"Juno Temple",
"RCA Records",
"Tony Joe White",
"Den of Geek",
"Elvis Presley",
"HBO",
"Ray Romano",
"Paste (magazine)",
"Jackson Browne",
"Back Stabbers (song)",
"James Gang",
"It's Not Unusual",
"Tom Jones (singer)",
"That Lady (song)",
"Jan and Dean",
"Bobby Darin",
"Albert Hammond",
"Susan Heyward",
"David Matthews (author)",
"IGN",
"Dr. John",
"The A.V. Club",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"Ephraim Sykes",
"Doctor, My Eyes",
"Focus (band)",
"It Never Rains in Southern California",
"Surf City (song)",
"The Guardian",
"Shawn Klush",
"Bobby Cannavale",
"Las Vegas",
"Colonel Tom Parker",
"The Sonics",
"Steely Dan",
"Annie Parisse",
"Funky Stuff",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Lena Olin",
"The O'Jays",
"Vulture (website)",
"Gene Jones (actor)",
"Polk Salad Annie",
"Emily Tremaine",
"Historical drama",
"Hocus Pocus (song)",
"John Ventimiglia",
"Pink Fairies",
"E.A.B.",
"Kool & the Gang",
"Bo Dietl"
] |
62,112,149 |
E.A.B.
|
"E.A.B." is the eighth episode of the American period drama television series Vinyl. The episode was written by Riccardo DiLoreto and Michael Mitnick and directed by Jon S. Baird. It originally aired on HBO on April 3, 2016.
The series is set in New York City in the 1970s. It focuses on Richie Finestra, American Century Records founder and president, whose passion for music and discovering talent has gone by the wayside. With his American Century Records on the verge of being sold, a life-altering event rekindles Finestra's professional fire, but it may leave his personal life in ruins. In the episode, Richie faces severe problems within American Century, while Kip is pressured to get a new song.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 0.567 million household viewers and gained a 0.20 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received positive reviews from critics, praising the segments involving Lester and Kip, as well as the performances.
==Plot==
Richie (Bobby Cannavale), Zak (Ray Romano) and Skip (J. C. MacKenzie) visit a loan officer at Chemical Bank with high school ties with Zak, hoping to get a loan. However, the officer declines their request, feeling the investment is not worthy. At American Century, Hal Underwood (Jay Klaitz) is fired by Andie (Annie Parisse) after he makes a disparaging comment of her.
Joe Corso (Bo Dietl) visits Richie, telling him that the police is re-opening Buck Rogers' case and that they will investigate them as they were on his house that night. Richie also has to deal with Zak's erratic search for new talent, as he still feels guilty over the events at Las Vegas. Desperate to get rid of his problems, Richie asks Maury (Paul Ben-Victor) to make a deal with Galasso (Armen Garo) for a loan, but Maury warns him that Richie will get himself killed if he fails to respect the terms of his deal. Galasso agrees to the loan, but forces Richie to share office space with Maury's label.
The Nasty Bits are scolded by Richie for not improving on their sound, demanding that they get a new song to play before opening for the New York Dolls. When Kip (James Jagger) is unable to come up with anything, Lester (Ato Essandoh) helps them by playing the E.A.B. chord progression, making the band see how many artists used it for popular songs. This motivates Kip and his band to finally move forward with a new song, which impresses the crowd.
Devon (Olivia Wilde) and Ingrid (Birgitte Hjort Sørensen) visit Max's Kansas City, noticing photographer Billy McVicar (Richard Short). When Billy is unable to get John Lennon on a photograph, Devon impresses him by asking Lennon to take a picture of her and Ingrid, which gets him to accept a photograph. Devon helps Billy in developing the photographs at a darkroom. While working at the mailroom, Clark (Jack Quaid) talks with an old rival, Jorge (Christian Navarro). Jorge confesses that he often steals company CDs for benefits in dance clubs, which impresses Clark.
After being forced to accept to Galasso's terms, Richie is detained by the detectives, who take him to the station for further questioning. Richie refuses to speak without a lawyer, also refusing to implicate Corso into the matter. However, the detectives reveal that Richie's office was bugged, and they have him arrested.
==Production==
===Development===
In March 2016, HBO announced that the eighth episode of the series would be titled "E.A.B.", and that it would be written by Riccardo DiLoreto and Michael Mitnick, and directed by Jon S. Baird. This was DiLoreto's first writing credit, Mitnick's first writing credit, and Baird's first directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
In its original American broadcast, "E.A.B." was seen by an estimated 0.567 million household viewers with a 0.20 in the 18–49 demographics. This means that 0.20 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 15% decrease in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.666 million household viewers with a 0.22 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"E.A.B." received positive reviews from critics. Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'E.A.B.' used just about everyone on the show's roster, and used them well. After a couple of episodes that really dug into certain specific characters, the show is now able to more fully realize its ensemble nature. The best part here, this week, being Lester's musical tutelage of Kip, and then the blending of both their sounds."
Dan Caffrey of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "At the risk of simplifying the series' strengths, I'm going to call it: Tonight's episode of Vinyl works because it focuses on making music — the writing of it, the distribution of it, the marketing of it, all of it. Almost every conflict and character motivation stems from the business of creating art, and when Vinyl sticks to being about business, Vinyl is good."
Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Clark is getting his mind blown by the underground, and possibly discovering some new talent that could save American Century, but otherwise this feels like a strangely anticlimactic ending for a season with only two episodes to go." Noel Murray of Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "This week's 'E.A.B.' is more than halfway decent. It's the best Vinyl since this season's promising third and fourth episodes — both of which succeeded by being stylish, funny, eventful, and relatively unpretentious. Here again, Vinyl backs down from trying to be the Very Important Saga of Richie Finestra, Troubled Genius, and instead weaves together several low-stakes stories with top-shelf material."
Gavin Edwards of The New York Times wrote, "Vinyl has featured lots of rock history lessons, but none as good as the moment when Lester decides to strap on a guitar and give the Nasty Bits a succinct history of the E-A-B chord progression." Dan Martin of The Guardian wrote, "Despite everything, you might feel sorry for Richie after Joe Corso fitted him up for Buck's murder. But his antics in Vegas last week, gambling the rest of the company's money away and letting Zak think it was his fault, have rendered the guy pretty much irredeemable by this point. By contrast, another solid and enjoyable episode finds things coming together for everyone else."
Tony Sokol of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "'E.A.B.' was an active movement in the series. While the American Century Records staff are finding their way forward, Richie is folding up in the middle." Robert Ham of Paste wrote, "What better way to pad out your shows with talent, than to contractually obligate your actors to do it. That is certainly helping a show like Vinyl, as these folks provide a little bit of grounding for the scenery chewing that is going on around them from week to week. Those fine character actors mentioned above may be wasting their time with this overwrought drama, but at least they're getting paid while they do it."
|
[
"The Twist (song)",
"Michael Mitnick",
"Vinyl (TV series)",
"Griffin Newman",
"Chemical Bank",
"Covert listening device",
"MacKenzie Meehan",
"What'd I Say",
"John Lennon",
"Den of Geek",
"HBO",
"Get Up, Stand Up",
"Creedence Clearwater Revival",
"Royal Blood (band)",
"Richard Short (actor)",
"Michael Drayer",
"Ray Romano",
"Paste (magazine)",
"The Futon Critic",
"Al Martino",
"Paul Ben-Victor",
"Jon S. Baird",
"Douglas Smith (actor)",
"Susan Heyward",
"Stir It Up",
"Christian Navarro",
"Bob Marley and the Wailers",
"John Lee Hooker",
"John Denver",
"The King and I (Vinyl)",
"IGN",
"The A.V. Club",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"The Beatles",
"Wild Safari",
"Barrabás",
"Here Comes the Sun",
"Ephraim Sykes",
"Reed Morano",
"darkroom",
"Focus (band)",
"Take Me Home, Country Roads",
"Jack Quaid",
"Travelin' Band",
"The Guardian",
"Bobby Cannavale",
"Las Vegas",
"Moon Over Naples",
"Ato Essandoh",
"Annie Parisse",
"Conway Twitty",
"Chubby Checker",
"It's Only Make Believe",
"J. C. MacKenzie",
"Mungo Jerry",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"New York Dolls",
"Olivia Wilde",
"Isaac Hayes",
"Chuck Berry",
"Vulture (website)",
"Ray Charles",
"Emily Tremaine",
"Historical drama",
"Maybellene",
"Michael Kostroff",
"Hocus Pocus (song)",
"Rock and Roll Queen (Vinyl)",
"Van Morrison",
"Birgitte Hjort Sørensen",
"The Royal Teens",
"Max's Kansas City",
"In the Summertime",
"Bo Dietl"
] |
62,112,150 |
Alibi (Vinyl)
|
"Alibi" is the tenth and final episode of the American period drama television series Vinyl. The episode was written by series creator Terence Winter, and directed by executive producer Allen Coulter. It originally aired on HBO on April 17, 2016.
The series is set in New York City in the 1970s. It focuses on Richie Finestra, American Century Records founder and president, whose passion for music and discovering talent has gone by the wayside. With his American Century Records on the verge of being sold, a life-altering event rekindles Finestra's professional fire, but it may leave his personal life in ruins. In the episode, Richie works with the authorities in order to take Galasso down.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 0.730 million household viewers and gained a 0.20 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received mixed reviews from critics, with praise to the closure to the Galasso storyline, but criticism towards the characters, narrative and pacing.
The series was originally renewed for a second season in February 2016. However, on June 22, 2016, HBO reversed its decision, making the episode the series finale.
==Plot==
Richie (Bobby Cannavale) meets with the Assistant U.S. Attorney to accept the deal in taking Galasso (Armen Garo) town. However, he is informed that the deal does not grand him protection. During this, Zak (Ray Romano) meets with Galasso, trying to get him in helping him in taking Richie out of American Century.
Galasso and his right hand man, Tony Del Greco, visit American Century's offices. Galasso reveals that Zak betrayed Richie, and he does not intend to help Zak in his request. He warns them to maintain the peace, also disclosing that he owns part of the Yankee Stadium as a front. This conversation is recorded for the detectives, and is used to arrest many of his associates. Meanwhile, Skip (J. C. MacKenzie), Scott (P. J. Byrne) and Julie (Max Casella) discover that the disco music is performing extremely well, as Clark (Jack Quaid) and Jorge (Christian Navarro) have convinced many clubs in using their CDs.
As the Nasty Bits prepare for their performance at the Academy of Music, Kip (James Jagger) feels more distant from Jamie (Juno Temple) following their threesome with Alex. When Jamie claims she loves Alex, Kip decides to abandon the band and evict her from his apartment. Jamie asks Richie for help, but he demands that she find her way out of it.
Richie and Zak are summoned to a warehouse by Galasso, who is angry about the arrests in his front. He is convinced they had a role in the raid, as it happened in close proximity to their discussion at the office. Richie then blames Corso (Bo Dietl) for the raid, who in turn confesses about Buck Rogers' death. Del Greco murders Corso and spares Richie and Zak. Richie asks Lester (Ato Essandoh) to use one of his songs as he is still the credited owner, forced to pay a substancial amount of money.
Lester and Jamie get to Kip's apartment, finding that he overdosed. They are forced to shower him and get him in time for the Nasty Bits' performance. Richie manages to get Kip revived in time, but fires Jamie for her role in the band's problems. The Nasty Bits fail to incite excitement in the crowd, but attract interest when the police arrive to stop the event for their controversial lyrics, which was planned by Richie. Richie then meets with his handler at a bar to disclose more information on Galasso but omitting Corso's murder. The bar owner, Hilly Kristal (David Vadim) tells Richie he plans to rename the bar to CBGB. Richie returns to the offices, where he reads a glowing review of the performance. He then states that he is officially launching Alibi Records, and invites the executives to vandalize their offices to celebrate.
==Production==
===Development===
The episode was written by series creator Terence Winter, and directed by executive producer Allen Coulter. This was Winter's third writing credit, and Coulter's third directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
In its original American broadcast, "Alibi" was seen by an estimated 0.730 million household viewers with a 0.20 in the 18–49 demographics. This means that 0.20 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a slight decrease in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 0.753 million household viewers with a 0.24 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Alibi" received mixed reviews from critics. Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "good" 7.4 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "Vinyls season finale briefly held some suspense when it seemed like Zak might get murdered, but for the most part it was one of the smoothest seasonal pills to swallow so far. Disappointingly so, in some regards. With Devon gone completely, it felt like things maybe lined up too nicely for Richie and his revolving door of record label woes."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "At the end of the finale, Richie holds a party to launch American Century's sub-label, Alibi Records, and invites all the party guests to cover his office walls with graffiti – the more profane, the better – as a way to symbolize the way the company has transformed how it does business. But spray paint on the walls is only cosmetic. Both American Century and Vinyl still need a lot of work, and may never be able to escape their old reputations." Dan Caffrey of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B–" grade and wrote, "At the rate Vinyl was going for a while, 'Alibi' could have just as easily ended in a shootout. With the drawing board now wiped clean of blood and a great deal of the coke residue, hopefully that kind of subject matter will soon be in the show’s past."
Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "If we've learned anything about Richie Finestra by now, it's that he has an ear for talent, a knack for hustling, and a nose for uncountable kilos of cocaine. But does he really have the guts to become a narc?" Noel Murray of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Despite all the distractions and dead ends, Vinyl still could someday become the show that takes the power of music seriously and finds drama in the lives of the businessmen who try to tap into that power, both for profit and for their egos. 'Alibi' isn't a great season-ender, but when it's clicking, it has a clear vision. This is how a corrupt business like the record industry inspires the world."
Gavin Edwards of The New York Times wrote, "The Galasso plotlines on Vinyl have been fitfully entertaining, but they're the show's fundamental error. The creators didn't have enough faith in the entertainment value of the music business. Too often, the record label has been treated like a colorful backdrop for one more organized-crime story. Sure, there have been mobbed-up record labels in the real world — but when the series dwells on Galasso, it feels like we're eating the leftovers stashed at the back of Martin Scorsese's refrigerator." Dan Martin of The Guardian wrote, "After a season that's spent most of its time portraying Richie Finestra as a coked-out monster of a man, this finale finds him coming out as something approaching triumphant. Which rather begs the question: what was the point?"
Tony Sokol of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "HBO's penultimate episodes are traditionally better than their finales, but 'Alibi' is a cathartic closing. A lot of this comes from the music they play. It's hard not to get caught up in the energy of the music and let that add to the excitement of the victory. Sure, I'm gonna miss Bo Dietl, but it was worth it just to see the office repainted." Robert Ham of Paste wrote, "Nor did the big victories in this episode feel earned or exciting. I've long since ceased caring about the fate of Indigo, or the two dudes pimping their records to the DJs of New York. And the big moment with the Nasty Bits was just plain stupid. For a show based in a rich cultural goldmine in one of the most amazing cities in the world... Vinyl is tone deaf, dumb, and blind."
|
[
"Allen Coulter",
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Writers Guild of America West",
"Palladium (New York City)",
"Count Five",
"Vinyl (TV series)",
"HitFix",
"Griffin Newman",
"The Stooges",
"MacKenzie Meehan",
"Juno Temple",
"Alan Sepinwall",
"Den of Geek",
"Boulevard of Broken Dreams (Al Dubin and Harry Warren song)",
"The Allman Brothers Band",
"Michael Drayer",
"HBO",
"Ray Romano",
"Paste (magazine)",
"Aretha Franklin",
"Hilly Kristal",
"Series finale",
"Yankee Stadium",
"The Hollywood Reporter",
"Max Casella",
"P. J. Byrne",
"Douglas Smith (actor)",
"Susan Heyward",
"Psychotic Reaction",
"Christian Navarro",
"MC5",
"IGN",
"CBGB",
"Kick Out the Jams (song)",
"The A.V. Club",
"Louis Jordan",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"Ephraim Sykes",
"Ain't Wastin' Time No More",
"Reed Morano",
"Jack Quaid",
"The Guardian",
"Bobby Cannavale",
"Ato Essandoh",
"Annie Parisse",
"J. C. MacKenzie",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Tony Bennett",
"Queen (band)",
"Terence Winter",
"Vulture (website)",
"Emily Tremaine",
"Historical drama",
"Rock and Roll Queen (Vinyl)",
"David Vadim",
"disco",
"Bo Dietl"
] |
62,112,153 |
Oaks Park High School
|
Oaks Park High School can refer to either of the following:
Oaks Park High School, Carshalton
Oaks Park High School, Ilford
|
[
"Oaks Park High School, Ilford",
"Oaks Park High School, Carshalton",
"Oak Park High School (disambiguation)"
] |
62,112,174 |
Lu Pinpin
|
Lu Pinpin (; born 23 October 1996) is a Chinese military officer and pentathlete who serves as a corporal in the People's Liberation Army. She took part in the military pentathlon event at the 2019 Military World Games and she shattered the world record in the women's 500m obstacle course on 20 October 2019 with a record timing of 2 minutes and 10.9 seconds.
|
[
"Military pentathlon at the 2019 Military World Games",
"Lu (surname 卢)",
"military pentathlon",
"obstacle course",
"People's Liberation Army",
"2019 Military World Games"
] |
62,112,176 |
The Mouthpiece (play)
|
The Mouthpiece is a 1930 crime play by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It was one of several theatrical failures written by Wallace following the enormous success of On the Spot, with a plot described as "flimsy".
It ran for twelve performances at Wyndham's Theatre in the West End. The cast included Emlyn Williams, Douglas Payne, Mabel Terry-Lewis and Margaret Bannerman. In 1935 it was posthumously novelised by Robert Curtis.
A gang of criminals discover that a young woman is unaware that she is about to inherit a fortune, and scheme to marry one of their members to her to get their hands on the money.
|
[
"Wyndham's Theatre",
"novelised",
"Emlyn Williams",
"West End theatre",
"Edgar Wallace",
"London",
"On the Spot (play)",
"Douglas Payne",
"Margaret Bannerman",
"Mabel Terry-Lewis"
] |
62,112,202 |
Josephine Fitzgerald Clarke
|
Josephine Fitzgerald Clarke (pen name, Errol Fitzgerald; 1865 – 6 June 1953), was a prolific Irish romance novelist who published over 40 novels for Mills & Boon between 1927 and 1953.
==Biography==
Born Bridget Josephine Moylan to Jeremiah Moylan and Mary Fitzgerald of Cork, her mother was the matron and her father the headmaster of the Model School. Her father went on to become a Barrington Lecturer on Political Economy. She was one of ten children. Her oldest brother Michael became a doctor; her oldest sister a school governess and the youngest sister Vida Mary Augusta Constance Moylan (1871-1962) married William Worby Beaumont, an engineer and inventor. Her sister Hannah became the first woman to get a degree in Science in Ireland. In 1873 the family moved to Limerick where they were living when her mother died.
Clarke move to England where she went by Josephine Fitzgerald Moylan. In 1893 she became Lady Josephine Fitzgerald Clarke when she married Sir Frederick William Alfred Clarke (1857-1927), Accountant and Comptroller-General of HM Customs and Excise. Their children were: Eric Fitzgerald Clarke (1894-1917); Desmond Frederick Aubrey Clarke (1896-1984); Gerald Wilfred Francis Clarke (1899-1918), and Philip Edward Joseph Clarke (1907-1973). After her husband died in 1927, Clarke began writing romantic novels under the nom de plume Errol Fitzgerald. She published over 40 novels in the next twenty years.
In her later years she lived in Bedford Park in Chiswick.
|
[
"William Worby Beaumont",
"Mills & Boon",
"Ireland",
"HM Customs and Excise",
"Romantic fiction",
"pen name",
"Chiswick",
"Hannah Moylan",
"Limerick"
] |
62,112,229 |
Template:Awards table/styles.css
|
/* */
.awards-table td:last-child {
text-align: center;
}
|
[] |
62,112,241 |
1988–89 B Group
|
The 1988–89 B Group was the 33rd season of the Bulgarian B Football Group, the second tier of the Bulgarian football league system. A total of 20 teams contested the league.
== Teams ==
=== Stadiums and locations ===
=== Personnel ===
== League table ==
==Top scorers==
|
[
"Stadion Chernomorets",
"Sasho Pargov",
"Ruse, Bulgaria",
"Sandanski Stadium",
"FC Hebar Pazardzhik",
"Gradski stadion (Lovech)",
"FC Lokomotiv Ruse",
"Pavel Panov",
"Ivan Marinov (footballer)",
"FC Dobrudzha Dobrich",
"Stadion Spartak (Pleven)",
"Vladimir Stoyanov (footballer)",
"Arena Arda",
"Pazardzhik",
"Razgrad",
"Petko Nikolov",
"Burgas",
"Third Amateur Football League (Bulgaria)",
"Sofia",
"Stanimir Stoilov",
"Vasil Ankov",
"1989–90 A Group",
"Todor Mechev",
"Plamen Linkov",
"Stefan Velichkov",
"OFC Spartak Pleven",
"Akademik Stadium",
"Stadion Bonchuk",
"Asen Milushev",
"Yuliyan Minchev",
"Georgi Tsvetanov",
"Biser Velkov",
"Haskovo",
"Kiril Vaglarov",
"Shumen",
"Ivan Penchev",
"OFC Vihren Sandanski",
"1987–88 B Group",
"FC Pavlikeni",
"Demir Demirev (footballer)",
"Stadion Panayot Volov",
"Ruzhin Ananiev",
"Petar Hubchev",
"FC Chernomorets Burgas",
"Ivan Tanev (footballer)",
"Stadion Druzhba (Dobrich)",
"Todor Borisov",
"Pleven",
"Grigor Petkov",
"FC Yambol",
"Stara Zagora",
"Todor Nikolov (football coach)",
"Ivan Tsvetkov (football coach)",
"Vesko Ganchev",
"Iliya Yankov",
"Vasil Gizdov",
"FC Arda Kardzhali",
"Atanas Marinov",
"Dobrich",
"Lyubomir Sheytanov",
"OFC Bdin Vidin",
"Evgeni Yanchovski",
"Stadion Akademik (Svishtov)",
"Sandanski",
"Stadion Nikola Laskov",
"Gradski Stadion (Pavlikeni)",
"Ventsislav Gochev",
"Lazar Dimitrov",
"Rafi Rafiev",
"FC Haskovo",
"Haskovo Stadium",
"Vidin",
"Bulgarian football league system",
"Stadion Hristo Botev (Gabrovo)",
"Kardzhali",
"FC Spartak Plovdiv",
"Kiril Ivkov",
"PFC Lokomotiv Stara Zagora",
"FC Marek Dupnitsa",
"Hristo Topalov",
"Tanko Tanev",
"OFC Akademik Svishtov",
"Kostadin Avramov",
"Valentin Ignatov (football)",
"Blagovest Petkov",
"Simeon Chilibonov",
"Todor Todorov (football coach)",
"Stoyan Cheshmedzhiev",
"PFC Akademik Sofia",
"Kurti Nedev",
"Lokomotiv Stadium (Stara Zagora)",
"Svishtov",
"PFC Litex Lovech",
"Kiril Furnigov",
"Angel Stefanov",
"Todor Diev Stadium",
"Lovech",
"Nikola Hristov (footballer)",
"1989–90 B Group",
"FC Yantra Gabrovo",
"Pavlikeni",
"Stadion Georgi Benkovski (Vidin)",
"Yambol",
"Ivan Georgiev (footballer, born 1962)",
"Dupnitsa",
"Milen Goranov",
"Toshko Borisov",
"FC Volov Shumen",
"Stadion Lyuben Shkodrov",
"PFC Ludogorets Razgrad",
"Second Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"Plovdiv",
"Ludogorets Arena",
"Gabrovo"
] |
62,112,243 |
Category:Book series introduced in 1936
|
[] |
|
62,112,245 |
Category:Ferranti computers
|
[] |
|
62,112,246 |
Jenna Bass
|
Jenna Cato Bass (born 1986) is a South African film director, screenwriter, and author. She has written short stories under the pseudonym Constance Myburgh, one of which was shortlisted for the 2012 Caine Prize.
==Early life==
Bass was born in London, England and grew up in South Africa. She practiced magic at the College of Magic. She went onto graduate from the Cape Town campus of AFDA, The School for the Creative Economy.
==Career==
In 2011 Bass founded Jungle Jim, a genre fiction magazine. Issue 6 featured her noir detective story 'Hunter Emmanuel', featuring an investigation into a dismembered prostitute. The story was shortlisted for the Caine Prize for African Writing in 2012. The film won Best South African Feature Film at the 2014 Durban International Film Festival.
High Fantasy (2017) was a satirical thriller about a group of young travellers who mysteriously exchange their bodies on a camping trip. Shot on iPhones, using improvisation, the film explored "the messy tangle of race, class and gender identity in modern-day South Africa."
Flatland (2019), an all-female "South African kitsch-western genre mashup", was shot on a larger budget. It was chosen as the opening film in the 2019 Berlinale Panorama.
==Works==
===Short stories===
Bass first started using a pseudonym, Constance Myburgh, in 2011 when publishing stories in her literary magazine, Jungle Jim, to keep her author's profile separate from her role as a screenwriter in the film industry.
"A Hole in the Ground" (Jungle Jim Volume. 2)
"Hunter Emmanuel" (Jungle Jim, Volume 6) Shortlisted for the Caine Prize in 2012.
===Filmography===
|
[
"College of Magic",
"South African people",
"The Sunday Times (South Africa)",
"AFDA, The School for the Creative Economy",
"genre fiction",
"Caine Prize",
"pseudonym",
"Camden, London",
"Rafiki (film)",
"Flatland (2019 film)",
"Caine Prize for African Writing",
"noir fiction",
"The Guardian",
"Good Madam",
"High Fantasy (film)",
"London",
"Tug of War (2021 film)",
"AFDA",
"Durban International Film Festival",
"Love the One You Love",
"iPhones",
"2019 Berlinale"
] |
62,112,291 |
Khambi-Irze
|
Khambi-Irze (, Xämbin-Irze) is a rural locality (a selo) in Achkhoy-Martanovsky District, Chechnya.
== Administrative and municipal status ==
Municipally, Khambi-Irze is incorporated as Khambi-Irzinskoye rural settlement. It is the administrative center of the municipality and is the only settlement included in it.
== Geography ==
Khambi-Irze is located on the left bank of the Sunzha River. It is located north-east of the town of Achkhoy-Martan and south-west of the city of Grozny.
The nearest settlements to Khambi-Irze are Alkhan-Kala in the north-east, Kulary in the east, Gekhi in the south-east, Valerik in the south-west, Shaami-Yurt in the west, and Zakan-Yurt in the north-west.
== History ==
In 1944, after the genocide and deportation of the Chechen and Ingush people and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was abolished, the village of Khambi-Irze (then, Khadis-Yurt) was renamed to Lermontovo, and settled by people from other ethnic groups. From 1944 to 1957, it was a part of the Novoselsky District of Grozny Oblast.
In 1958, after the Vaynakh people returned and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was restored, the village was renamed again to Lermontov-Yurt.
In the early 1990s, the modern name, Khambi-Irze was given to the village.
== Population ==
1990 Census: 2,144
2002 Census: 3,123
2010 Census: 3,297
2019 estimate: 3,852
According to the results of the 2010 Census, the majority of residents of Khambi-Irze were ethnic Chechens.
|
[
"village",
"Alkhan-Kala",
"Kulary",
"Grozny Oblast",
"Valerik, Achkhoy-Martanovsky District",
"Gekhi, Urus-Martanovsky District",
"Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic",
"Zakan-Yurt",
"Chechnya",
"Shaami-Yurt",
"Achkhoy-Martanovsky District",
"types of inhabited localities in Russia",
"Khambi-Irzinskoye rural settlement",
"Grozny",
"Sunzha River",
"Achkhoy-Martan"
] |
62,112,297 |
Jamaluddin Roslan
|
Jamaluddin Roslan (born 18 December 1978) is a Malaysian field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Hockey at the 2010 Asian Games",
"2010 Asian Games",
"Field hockey at the 2002 Asian Games",
"2002 Asian Games",
"Field hockey",
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Asian Games",
"field hockey"
] |
62,112,302 |
Category:Chinese pentathletes
|
[] |
|
62,112,310 |
Category:Economy of Mpumalanga
|
[] |
|
62,112,312 |
File:Superboy 2018.jpg
|
==Summary==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,112,318 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Noroz (israeli rapper)
|
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) 19:27, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Noroz (israeli rapper)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non notable musician, failing WP:NMUSIC. Ceethekreator (talk) 14:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Bands and musicians-related deletion discussions. Ceethekreator (talk) 14:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Music-related deletion discussions. Ceethekreator (talk) 14:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Israel-related deletion discussions. Ceethekreator (talk) 14:55, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Fixed pointer on article creator's talk page. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 01:35, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete unless real sources are found. I tried to clean up the article, but I couldn't find any sources. As I don't speak Hebrew, it's possible there is something there, but using YouTube as a source for even the fact that the songs are associated with him is problematic. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 01:35, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per nom. -TheseusHeLl (talk) 22:21, 24 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Delete without prejudice to it being recreated in future should sufficient sources be found. The article as it stands has no worthwhile sources (all of them being YouTube) and I cannot find anything on the (admittedly English-language) Web. Thus fails WP:NMUSIC, WP:BASIC and WP:GNG. Potentially it is WP:TOOSOON. -Lopifalko (talk) 07:47, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"Hebrew language",
"Noroz (israeli rapper)",
"WP:TOOSOON",
"WP:BASIC",
"WP:NMUSIC"
] |
62,112,324 |
The Old Man (Wallace play)
|
The Old Man is a 1931 mystery play by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Its original production was staged at Wyndham's Theatre in London's West End for a ninety performance run. It is set entirely in the "Coat of Arms" tavern where a mysterious old man lurks in the background, reputedly an escapee from a lunatic asylum. The original cast included Alfred Drayton, Jack Melford, Harold Warrender and Finlay Currie.
==Film adaptation==
The same year the play was adapted into the film The Old Man directed by Manning Haynes. Wallace was closely associated with British Lion, which produced the film.
|
[
"Finlay Currie",
"mystery play",
"Wyndham's Theatre",
"West End theatre",
"England",
"Harold Warrender",
"Jack Melford",
"Edgar Wallace",
"British Lion Film Corporation",
"The Old Man (1931 film)",
"London",
"Manning Haynes",
"Alfred Drayton"
] |
62,112,326 |
Global Science
|
Global Science (Urdu: گلوبل سائنس) is a monthly magazine published in Pakistan. It was first published in January 1998. Global Science reports science journalism in Urdu.
== Relaunch ==
The magazine was discontinued in November 2016 due to financial problems. However, in the beginning of 2019, new science writers from China petitioned on the internet for the editor-in-chief, Aleem Ahmed, to relaunch the magazine. In September 2019, Global Science was relaunched with a contemporary approach.
After the release of its September 2019 Issue, Pakistani poet and writer, Amjad Aslam Amjad, wrote an article on Express News to show his appreciation for the Global Science team in "promoting science in Pakistan". Senior Science Editor of ARY News, Fawwad Raza, also appreciated the work. An article regarding Global Science was published in Monthly Taleemi Quaidat and on Zeeshan Usmani's website
|
[
"Science",
"Biodiversity",
"Aleem Ahmed",
"Technology",
"Karachi",
"Amjad Islam Amjad",
"List of magazines in Pakistan",
"Astronomy",
"Urdu",
"Nature",
"science journalism",
"magazine",
"Pakistan"
] |
62,112,333 |
Hyde Run (Red Clay Creek tributary)
|
Hyde Run is a long 1st order tributary to Red Clay Creek in New Castle County, Delaware.
==Variant names==
According to the Geographic Names Information System, it has also been known historically as:
Clark's Run
Hyde's Run
==Course==
Hyde Run rises in a pond in Stuyvesant Hills, Delaware on the Mill Creek divide in New Castle County, Delaware. Hyde Run then flows southeast to meet Red Clay Creek at Faulkland in Brandywine Springs Park.
==Watershed==
Hyde Run drains of area, receives about 46.5 in/year of precipitation, has a topographic wetness index of 430.32 and is about 16% forested.
|
[
"Christina River",
"topographic wetness index",
"Delaware Bay",
"Atlantic Ocean",
"White Clay Creek",
"Faulkland, Delaware",
"New Castle County, Delaware",
"Delaware",
"United States",
"Delaware River",
"Geographic Names Information System",
"List of Delaware rivers",
"Mill Creek (White Clay Creek tributary)",
"Red Clay Creek"
] |
62,112,336 |
Birds of a Feather (2019 film)
|
Birds of a Feather, also known as Manou the Swift or Swift, is a 2019 German animated adventure comedy film directed by Christian Haas and Andrea Block. The film features the voices of Kate Winslet, Willem Dafoe, Josh Keaton, Cassandra Steen and David Shaughnessy.
== Cast ==
Kate Winslet as Blanche, Yves' wife who is the first to discover Manou and take him in
Willem Dafoe as Yves, the strong-willed but stubborn leader of the seagull colony
Josh Keaton as Manou, an orphaned Swift who was adopted and raised by seagulls
Cassandra Steen as Kalifa, a female Swift and Manou's love interest
Mikey Kelley as Luc, Manou's adoptive brother with whom he shares a strong bond
David Shaughnessy as Percival, a flightless bird who lives in a cemetery, and frequently hangs around with the Swifts
Arif S. Kinchen as Poncho, a short, fat Swift and one of Kalifa's brothers
Nolan North as Yusuf, a slim, taller Swift and one of Kalifa's brothers
Julie Nathanson as Francoise, a student at the sailing school and a rival of Manou
Rob Paulsen as Sandpipers
== Plot ==
The film follows the adventures of Manou, a swift who was raised by seagulls and struggles to fit in with them, as well as his journey to accepting his identity as a swift, fighting rats and earning the respect of seagulls and swifts alike.
|
[
"Rob Paulsen",
"Michael Roesch",
"Willem Dafoe",
"Cassandra Steen",
"adventure comedy film",
"The Guardian",
"Mikey Kelley",
"Arif S. Kinchen",
"British Board of Film Classification",
"Julie Nathanson",
"Kate Winslet",
"Nolan North",
"Irish Film Classification Office",
"Radio Times",
"David Shaughnessy",
"Josh Keaton"
] |
62,112,348 |
Camellia of a thousand flowers
|
Redirect Ten-thousand-flower Camellia
|
[
"Ten-thousand-flower Camellia"
] |
62,112,356 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/dreamsiteradioplayer.it
|
== Links ==
dreamsiteradioplayer.it resolves to [//94.23.12.50 94.23.12.50]
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 11 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,362 |
1991 NCAA Division II men's soccer tournament
|
The 1991 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship was the 20th annual tournament held by the NCAA to determine the top men's Division II college soccer program in the United States.
Florida Tech defeated Sonoma State, 5–1, to win a second national title. The Panthers (19-2-1) were coached by Rick Stottler.
The final match was held in Melbourne, Florida on December 7, 1991.
==Bracket==
== Final ==
|
[
"Florida Tech Panthers",
"Cal State San Bernardino Coyotes",
"Cal Poly Mustangs",
"1990 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship",
"National Collegiate Athletic Association",
"Tampa Spartans",
"Bridgeport Purple Knights",
"NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship",
"1992 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship",
"Oakland Golden Grizzlies men's soccer",
"Keene State Owls",
"USC Upstate Spartans",
"Richard Sharpe (soccer)",
"1991 NCAA Division III men's soccer tournament",
"Franklin Pierce Ravens",
"1991 NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament",
"1991 NCAA Division II women's soccer tournament",
"Andrew Ziemer",
"Sonoma State Seawolves",
"UMSL Tritons",
"NCAA Division II",
"Melbourne, Florida",
"1991 NAIA men's soccer tournament",
"College soccer in the United States",
"Seattle Pacific Falcons",
"Rick Stottler"
] |
62,112,368 |
Songzanling Monastery
|
Redirect Ganden Sumtseling Monastery
|
[
"Ganden Sumtseling Monastery"
] |
62,112,369 |
File:Meidingersfn.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"Meidingers Jugendschriften Verlag"
] |
62,112,374 |
Romaine-2 Generating Station
|
The Romaine-2 Generating Station () is a 640 MW hydroelectric generating station on the Romaine River in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec, Canada. It is owned and operated by Hydro-Québec.
==Description==
The Romaine-2 Dam is from the river mouth.
It is in the unorganized territory of Lac-Jérôme in the Minganie Regional County Municipality.
It is high, and has a holding capacity of .
It is a concrete gravity dam on a foundation of treated rock.
The reservoir area is .
Drawdown from high to low water level is .
The lower part of the Abbé Huard River now forms the northeast arm of the Romaine-2 reservoir.
In addition to the main dam, which includes the spillway, the river is contained by dykes A2, B2 and C2 above the dam, and by dykes D2, E2 and F2 below the dam.
Five of the dykes contain asphalt/concrete waterproof cores.
The largest is high.
The penstock leads from an intake structure just north of Dyke D2 in a southeast direction to the generating station.
The water passes through a surge chamber, down conduits to the turbines and out through the tailrace to the river to the east of the station.
Water flow is .
The station has installed capacity of 640 MW, making it the most powerful of the Romaine complex.
The plant provides 3.3 TWh annually, at a utilization factor of 0.58.
==History==
The dams and generating station are part of a huge hydroelectric complex with four dams that was launched in 2009 under the government of Jean Charest.
The overall Romaine project was formally launched by Jean Charest in May 2009.
A road was built to provide access to the four dams.
The Murailles camp at from the start of the road was built to house up to 2,408 workers on the Romaine 2 and Romaine 1 projects.
Construction of Romaine-2 lasted from November 2009 to November 2014.
The generating station came into service in 2014.
In September 2017 Hydro-Québec had said it had no plans for more dams due to the present surplus of electricity.
During the inauguration of Romaine-3 in October 2017, Quebec premier Philippe Couillard confirmed that no more major projects were planned.
==Controversies==
The company had to negotiate several agreements with the local Innu communities, paying more than CDN$200 million over a 60-year period to compensate for the effects of the dams, roads and electric transmission lines.
There were a number of controversies.
In March 2012 Quebec Route 138 was blocked at Maliotenam by the Innu, who were demanding compensation for the power lines on their territory.
In June 2015 Route 138 was blocked at Pessamit and Maliotenam, and the access road to the construction site was blocked, by construction workers demanding that more local workers be hired.
In July 2015 the road to the site was blocked by the Innu of Natashquan who felt that Hydro-Quebec did not respect the agreement signed in 2008.
In March 2016 a court rejected the demand by Innu families of Uashat mak Mani-utenam to stop the project.
In November 2016 there was controversy over the waste of wood cut in the reservoirs.
|
[
"Côte-Nord",
"Lac-Jérôme, Quebec",
"Pessamit",
"Romaine River",
"Natashquan 1",
"Jean Charest",
"Romaine-3",
"Maliotenam",
"Abbé Huard River",
"Philippe Couillard",
"Hydroelectricity",
"Quebec Route 138",
"Romaine 1",
"Hydro-Québec",
"Innu"
] |
62,112,386 |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Da Tung and Xi'an Bao Bao, replica of Shang Dynasty wine pitcher, China, c. 1200-1100 BC - Portland, Oregon - DSC01124.jpg
|
===Da Tung and Xi'an Bao Bao===
Voting period ends on 30 Oct 2019 at 15:08:04 (UTC)
Reason:High Resolution in good Relevance.
Articles in which this image appears:Da Tung and Xi'an Bao Bao
FP category for this image:Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Artwork/Sculpture
Creator:Unknown (Uploaded by Daderot)
Support as nominator – Telex80 (talk) 15:08, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
I don't like asking this, but are we okay as to copyright with this? I thought that at least most of the US lacked Freedom of Panorama, but the case feels a little more ambiguous than most - based off of an out of copyright original, anonymous, owned by the city... Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 17:27, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
The anon claim is air. The city gov certainly knows who the creator is. Geoffroi 00:48, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
In the U.S., any photograph taken on public property or of (a subject on) public property is fair game, unless it's been published in a copyrighted medium. European laws may be more restrictive, as Google's 'Street View' found out in Germany – where Datenschutz (information privacy) law is strict with regard to people's faces. – Sca (talk) 13:37, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
:commons:Commons:Copyright_rules_by_territory/United_States#Freedom_of_panorama is what I'm worried about. If it's not unique compared to the original wine pitcher, then we're fine, but... Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 02:20, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
I didn't know about the panorama rule, which seems minor and obscure. But I see the target article is stub-ish and sketchy, which leads one to question EV. – Sca (talk) 13:05, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Freedom of Panorama is not a minor issue for photos of artworks nor even (e.g. in France) for photos of modern buildings. I agree that this image seems to be problematic with respect to that issue. —David Eppstein (talk) 18:31, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
The background is too busy. Shallower depth of field would have helped. —David Eppstein (talk) 16:34, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment. Before this closes, :commons:Commons:Deletion requests/ could use more participation. If the FP nomination looked likely to pass, I'd think we should put it on hold while we wait for the outcome of the deletion discussion, but I don't think that's going to be relevant. —David Eppstein (talk) 03:51, 29 October 2019 (UTC)
--Armbrust The Homunculus 21:10, 30 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"WP:FP",
"Da Tung and Xi'an Bao Bao",
"commons:Commons:Copyright rules by territory/United States",
"commons:Commons:Deletion requests/"
] |
62,112,390 |
Category:Video games set in Rotterdam
|
Video games set in Rotterdam.
|
[
"Rotterdam",
"Video game"
] |
62,112,394 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/privacylawguide.com
|
== Links ==
privacylawguide.com resolves to [//143.95.238.20 143.95.238.20]
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"
] |
62,112,396 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Berbalang
|
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. Moving the other article is left to ordinary editorial action. RL0919 (talk) 19:22, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Berbalang===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Completely non-notable D&D creature. Outside of the handful of primary sources, there is nothing discussing this version of the creature in any way that denotes notability. Searching for sources only brings up information on the actual, mythological creature, Berbalang (legendary creature). Being the actual primary version of the name, that article should probably be moved to this space. Rorshacma (talk) 15:10, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. Rorshacma (talk) 15:10, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Games-related deletion discussions. Rorshacma (talk) 15:10, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fantasy-related deletion discussions. Necrothesp (talk) 13:13, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment. If it's deleted then obviously Berbalang (legendary creature) should be moved to Berbalang. It should be the primary topic anyway. -- Necrothesp (talk) 13:13, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete per nom. Move the legendary creature article to the main namespace as the obvious primary topic.ZXCVBNM (TALK) 17:16, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete and move Berbalang (legendary creature) to Berbalang. A short mention could be added to the main Berbalang article explaining that they appear in Dungeons & Dragons. Not a very active user (talk) 04:40, 23 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.
|
[
"Berbalang (legendary creature)",
"Berbalang"
] |
62,112,397 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/situsduniabola.com
|
== Links ==
situsduniabola.com resolves to [//45.64.97.42 45.64.97.42]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 3 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,405 |
Martinus Swarte
|
Martinus Swarte (born 13 May 1813 – 8 April 1835) was a Dutch colonial administrator on the Gold Coast. He was interim commander in 1833.
== Biography ==
Martinus Swarte was born in Amsterdam to Franciscus Swarte from Papenburg and Anna Sophia van der Aa from Haarlem. At age 16, on 2 March 1830, Martinus Swarte was appointed assistant on the Dutch Gold Coast. In March 1833, he became acting commander, after the previous acting commander Eduard Daniel Leopold van Ingen had died. He was relieved of his duties on 10 May 1833, when Christiaan Lans arrived from the Netherlands to replace him. At the end of 1833, he went on leave to Europe, but shipwrecked on the way home. Martinus Swarte died in Nice on 8 April 1835, where he was staying to recuperate from his wounds.
== Personal life ==
Swarte married Charlotte Bartels, daughter of Carel Hendrik Bartels around 1833. They had one daughter, Anna Sophia Swarte, who would in 1851 marry the British merchant and mayor of Cape Coast Robert Hutchison.
|
[
"Nice",
"Amsterdam",
"Duchy of Savoy",
"Christiaan Lans",
"United Kingdom",
"Papenburg",
"List of colonial governors of the Dutch Gold Coast",
"Dutch Gold Coast",
"Eduard Daniel Leopold van Ingen",
"Robert Hutchison (mayor)",
"Carel Hendrik Bartels",
"Europe",
"William I of the Netherlands",
"Haarlem",
"Netherlands"
] |
62,112,417 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Windbreaker (Transformers) (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. RL0919 (talk) 19:21, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Windbreaker (Transformers)===
AfDs for this article:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non-notable topic TTN (talk) 15:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. TTN (talk) 15:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Comics and animation-related deletion discussions. TTN (talk) 15:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete The "rationale" given in the first AfD makes my brain hurt. A clear fail of WP:GNG. Transformers, roll out... to make my jacket?ZXCVBNM (TALK) 17:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete - clearly fails WP:GNG. Onel5969 TT me 02:18, 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:GNG",
"Windbreaker (Transformers)"
] |
62,112,423 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Pyro (Transformers)
|
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. — JJMC89 (T·C) 22:38, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Pyro (Transformers)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non-notable topic TTN (talk) 15:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. TTN (talk) 15:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Comics and animation-related deletion discussions. TTN (talk) 15:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete - does not meet WP:GNG. If there is an appropriate list article, redirect would be fine. Onel5969 TT me 02:18, 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:GNG",
"Pyro (Transformers)"
] |
62,112,432 |
Category:Regionally Important Geological/Geomorphological Sites (RIGS) in Cumbria
|
[] |
|
62,112,433 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Transtech
|
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. — JJMC89 (T·C) 22:36, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Transtech===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Non-notable topic TTN (talk) 15:17, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Fictional elements-related deletion discussions. TTN (talk) 15:17, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete - another piece of non-notable fancruft. Fails WP:GNG. Onel5969 TT me 02:19, 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:GNG",
"Transtech"
] |
62,112,436 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/cricketpointer.com
|
== Links ==
cricketpointer.com resolves to 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.
Broken regex \bconexiondigital\ (perl-corrected: \bconexiondigital\) on [//es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist es.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\bconexiondigital\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
Broken regex \ (perl-corrected: \) on [//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist ru.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
web.archive.org resolves to 207.241.237.3
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.
Broken regex \bconexiondigital\ (perl-corrected: \bconexiondigital\) on [//es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist es.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\bconexiondigital\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
Broken regex \ (perl-corrected: \) on [//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist ru.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
== Users ==
AnomieBOT
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group bot on some wikis
ArglebargleIV
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Blue Square Thing
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group reviewer on some wikis
Brandon
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups sysop, rollbacker on some wikis
ClueBot NG
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups bot, rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Em-mustapha
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups sysop, rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Feminist
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
GreenC bot
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group bot on some wikis
Hardyplants
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group rollbacker on some wikis
I dream of horses
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Justiyaya
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Keith D
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group sysop on some wikis
Kleinpecan
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group rollbacker on some wikis
Kpddg
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Lugnuts
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group reviewer on some wikis
Materialscientist
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups sysop, checkuser on some wikis
NarSakSasLee
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group rollbacker on some wikis
Ohnoitsjamie
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group sysop on some wikis
Peaceray
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group sysop on some wikis
Tbhotch
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Ts12rAc
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Willondon
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group reviewer on some wikis
== Additions ==
Displayed all 154 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,112,437 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/cricketpointer.com
|
== Links ==
cricketpointer.com resolves to 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.
Broken regex \bconexiondigital\ (perl-corrected: \bconexiondigital\) on [//es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist es.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\bconexiondigital\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
Broken regex \ (perl-corrected: \) on [//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist ru.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
web.archive.org resolves to 207.241.237.3
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.
Broken regex \bconexiondigital\ (perl-corrected: \bconexiondigital\) on [//es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist es.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\bconexiondigital\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
Broken regex \ (perl-corrected: \) on [//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist ru.wikipedia.org] blacklist, error: Trailing \ in regex m/\/ at LinkSaver.pl line 5540.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 6 additions out of 154 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/cricketpointer.com
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bcricketpointer\.com\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/cricketpointer.com]]
\bweb\.archive\.org\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/web.archive.org]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 15:18, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 15:19, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 15:34, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Autostale: very old local report (>7 days). No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 05:00, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
|
[
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/cricketpointer.com",
"en:User:COIBot",
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/web.archive.org"
] |
62,112,439 |
The Northing Tramp
|
The Northing Tramp is a 1926 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace.
It was adapted for the film Strangers on Honeymoon (1936) directed by Albert de Courville.
|
[
"United Kingdom",
"Albert de Courville",
"Strangers on Honeymoon",
"Edgar Wallace",
"crime novel"
] |
62,112,445 |
Template:Immigration sidebar
|
[
"Immigration"
] |
|
62,112,446 |
Category:Regionally Important Geological/Geomorphological Sites (RIGS) in Suffolk
|
.
|
[] |
62,112,449 |
Category:Regionally Important Geological/Geomorphological Sites (RIGS)
|
Regionally Important Geological Sites are designated sites of geological interest in the United Kingdom.
|
[
"Regionally Important Geological Sites"
] |
62,112,461 |
Frank Hoppensteadt
|
Frank Charles Hoppensteadt (born 29 April 1938) is an American mathematician, specializing in mathematical biology and dynamical systems.
Frank Hoppensteadt studied physics and mathematics at Butler University with bachelor's degree in 1960. At the University of Wisconsin–Madison, he received in 1962 his master's degree and in 1965 his PhD with thesis Singular perturbations on the infinite interval under the supervision of Fred Guenther Brauer and Wolfgang Wasow. From 1965 Hoppensteadt was an assistant professor at Michigan State University in East Lansing. From 1968 he was an associate professor and later a professor at New York University's Courant Institute until his resignation in 1979. From 1977 to 1986 he was a professor at the University of Utah, where he also chaired the mathematics department. From 1986 he was Dean of Natural Science at Michigan State University and then, from 1995, at Arizona State University, Professor of Mathematics and Electrical Engineering and Director of the Center for Systems Science and Engineering Research. From 2004 he was Senior Vice Provost for Planning at New York University, and then from 2006 Research Professor at New York University's Courant Institute until his retirement in 2012.
His research deals with perturbation methods for dynamical systems and various aspects of theoretical biology, such as neural networks, neuromorphic engineering, disease spreading, and population dynamics.
Hoppensteadt was a Christensen Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford. He was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002.
In 1998 he was, with Eugene Izhikevich, an invited speaker with talk Canonical models in mathematical neuroscience at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berlin.
==Selected publications==
Mathematical methods for analysis of a complex disease, Courant Lecture Notes in Mathematics 2011
with Eugene M. Izhikevich: Weakly connected neural networks, Springer 1997; 2012 pbk reprint
Analysis and simulation of chaotic systems, Springer, 1993; 2013 pbk reprint of 1st edition; 2nd edition 2000
with Charles S. Peskin: Modeling and simulation in medicine and the life sciences, Springer, 2nd edition 2002 (first edition entitled Mathematics in medicine and the life sciences, 1992)
with Anatoliy Skorokhod, Habib Salehi: Random perturbation methods with applications in science and engineering, Springer Verlag 2002
Quasi-static state analysis of differential, difference, integral, and gradient systems, Courant Lecture Notes in Mathematics, 2010
Mathematical theories of populations : demographics, genetics and epidemics, SIAM 1975
An introduction to the mathematics of neurons, Cambridge University Press 1986; 1997 2nd edition, pbk
as editor: Nonlinear oscillations in biology, AMS 1979
as editor: Mathematical aspects of physiology, AMS 1981
Founding editor: Cambridge Studies in Mathematical Biology, Cambridge University Press 1980 to 2000
|
[
"University of Utah",
"population dynamics",
"Wolfgang Wasow",
"Mathematical biology",
"East Lansing",
"International Congress of Mathematicians",
"Courant Institute",
"United States",
"Arizona State University",
"mathematical biology",
"Charles S. Peskin",
"Butler University",
"American Association for the Advancement of Science",
"Oak Park, Illinois",
"St Catherine's College, Oxford",
"Dynamical Systems",
"Michigan State University",
"Anatoliy Skorokhod",
"New York University",
"neural network",
"theoretical biology",
"University of Wisconsin–Madison"
] |
62,112,467 |
File:The Northing Tramp.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,112,469 |
Michael Turk
|
Michael Matthew-Paul Turk (born March 14, 1998) is an American professional football punter who is a free agent. He played college football for the Lafayette Leopards, Oklahoma Sooners, and Arizona State Sun Devils. Despite declaring for the 2020 NFL draft, he would regain two years of eligibility after not being selected and not being signed following the draft. After playing for two years at Oklahoma, he declared for the 2023 NFL draft and signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent, before being waived prior to the pre-season.
==Early years==
Turk attended Ridge Point High School, where he played safety, contributing to the school winning the 6A Region Championship in 2014 and 2015. In less than three years, Turk suffered three ACL tears, which hampered his ability to become a safety at the next level.
After graduating, he took a year off to train with his brother, Ben Turk, a former punter for Notre Dame, during which he decided that he wanted to become a punter.
=== Arizona State ===
In 2018 after Turk's freshman season, he transferred to Arizona State University and was redshirted to comply with the NCAA transfer rules.
As a sophomore in 2019, against Kent State University, Turk recorded punts of 64, 62, 65, 49 and 75 yards, setting an NCAA single-game record with a 63.0-yard average per attempt. He earned honorable-mention All-American honors from GPR Analytics while ranking fourth in the nation with a 95.80 GPR Punt Rating.
On January 6, 2020, he opted to declare for the 2020 NFL draft. On June 3, 2020, after failing to be selected by a team, in an unprecedented decision, the NCAA restored Turk's remaining two years of eligibility and allowed him to return to Arizona State.
As a junior in 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Arizona State only played 4 contests during the season. He registered a career-high 47.2-yard average on 14 punts and received first-team All-Pac-12 honors.
On August 5, 2021, Turk entered his name into the NCAA transfer portal, in part due to his opposition to Arizona State requiring the COVID-19 vaccine to travel to road games. On August 12, he announced that he would be transferring to the University of Oklahoma.
=== Oklahoma ===
As a senior in 2021, he appeared in 11 games, averaging 51.2 yards on 35 punts, with 16 punts downed inside 20-yard line. His 51.2-yard average would have ranked second nationally, but he did not have enough attempts to qualify. He received All-Big 12 honors. He had 20 punts that went over 50 yards and 8 that went over 60 yards. The team did not punt against Tulane University and Kansas State University. He had an 85-yard punt (tied for third in school history) and averaged 58 yards on three punts against the University of Texas.
As a super senior in 2022, he appeared in all 13 games, averaging 46.8 yards (ranked third nationally) on 63 punts, with 22 punts downed inside the 20-yard line. He received All-Big 12 honors. He had 22 punts that went over 50 yards and 6 that went at least 60 yards. He also completed two passes on fake field goals plays, which included a 3-yarder for a first down against the University of Texas and a 2-yarder for a touchdown against Iowa State University. He averaged 49.3 yards on 6 punts, including two critical punts of at least 60 yards in the fourth quarter against Iowa State University, earning Big 12 Co-Special Teams Player of the Week honors.
==Professional career==
===2020 NFL Combine===
On February 27, 2020, Turk set an NFL Scouting Combine record for punters, with 25 bench press repetitions of 225 pounds. Of those who participated, Turk's total bench reps were more than all 33 wide receivers, 12 out of 13 tight ends, with Josiah Deguara tying him, and 19 offensive lineman out of 34. His bench reps also tied for second among special teams participants since 2006.
===2023 NFL Combine===
On March 3, 2023, Turk competed in his second NFL Combine in preparation for the 2023 NFL draft.
===Miami Dolphins===
After going undrafted, Turk signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent on April 29, 2023. He was waived by the team in favor of Jake Bailey on August 2.
In November 2023, Turk worked out with the New England Patriots. Turk was not signed.
==Personal life==
Turk's uncles are former NFL punter Matt Turk and former NFL long snapper Dan Turk. Turk has a YouTube channel called Hangtime, where he uploads videos about his experience playing for Oklahoma, fitness, and his Baptist faith, often mentioning some of his favorite Bible verses. As of March 2, 2025, he has over 1,900,000 subscribers to his YouTube channel. They have one child.
|
[
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"Ryan Trahan",
"undrafted free agent",
"Lafayette Leopards football",
"Pac-12 Conference",
"Oklahoma Sooners football",
"Safety (gridiron football position)",
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"long snapper",
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"New England Patriots",
"2023 NFL draft",
"Tulane University",
"Matt Turk",
"2020 Pac-12 Conference football season",
"Iowa State University",
"Bible",
"Anterior cruciate ligament injury",
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"Kent State University",
"Miami Dolphins",
"Punter (gridiron football)",
"2020 NFL draft",
"Dallas, Texas",
"Lafayette College",
"NFL Scouting Combine",
"Bedlam Series",
"2022 Big 12 Conference football season",
"Kansas State University",
"2019 Pac-12 Conference football season",
"college football",
"Josiah Deguara",
"Big 12 Conference",
"Patriot League",
"Dude Perfect",
"Baptist",
"Oklahoma Sooners softball",
"Sienna, Texas",
"University of Oklahoma",
"University of Texas",
"Notre Dame Fighting Irish football",
"NFL",
"Punter (football)",
"American football",
"Arizona State Sun Devils football",
"NCAA"
] |
62,112,488 |
Cruisin' (Earth, Wind & Fire song)
|
"Cruisin" is a love ballad by American band Earth, Wind & Fire. It is featured in the film Get On The Bus and was released on the soundtrack album by Interscope Records on October 8, 1996. The song features the falsetto singing on the lead vocals of Philip Bailey. It was included on Earth, Wind & Fire's studio album "In The Name Of Love", the following year. The song was written by Philip Bailey, Roxanne Seeman, Morris Pleasure and Sonny Emory while the production was handled by Maurice White.
It was the first Earth, Wind & Fire song to appear in a movie since "Got To Get You Into My Life" in "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band."
==Overview==
Cruisin' was produced by Maurice White and composed by Philip Bailey, Roxanne Seeman, Morris Pleasure and Sonny Emory. The song first appeared on Earth, Wind & Fire's 1996 studio LP "Avatar" which was only released in Japan.
Earth, Wind & Fire also contributed the song to the soundtrack of the 1996 feature film Get on the Bus. Get on the Bus was a 1996 American drama about a group of African-American men who are taking a cross-country bus trip in order to participate in the Million Man March. The movie premiered on the March's one year anniversary.
==Critical reception ==
Omoronke Idowu of Vibe called the song "a silky, celestial ballad". When reviewing the album, Geoffrey Himes of The Washington Post, called it a "slow romantic ballad" stating "Bailey's impossibly high tenor sounds as if it's in a permanent swoon." Steve Jones of USA Today declared that the song has a "mellow groove". Phyl Garland of Stereo Review also described Cruisin' as "hauntingly atmospheric". Cary Darling for the Orange County Register described it as "sleek."
==Personnel==
Philip Bailey – lead and background vocals
Verdine White – bass guitar
Sonny Emory – drums
Morris Pleasure – keyboards
Scott Mayo - saxophone
Maurice White – production
|
[
"In the Name of Love (Earth, Wind & Fire album)",
"Morris Pleasure",
"Philip Bailey",
"Kalimba Music",
"Interscope Records",
"Hollywood, Los Angeles",
"Vibe (magazine)",
"Earth, Wind & Fire",
"contemporary R&B",
"bass guitar",
"The Orange County Register",
"Record producer",
"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (film)",
"The Washington Post",
"Roxanne Seeman",
"Got to Get You into My Life",
"Lead vocalist",
"ballad",
"The Greenville News",
"Rhino Records",
"AllMusic",
"Backing vocalist",
"Soul music",
"Stereo Review",
"Vocal Group Hall of Fame",
"IMDb",
"USA Today",
"falsetto",
"Get on the Bus",
"Get on the Bus (soundtrack)",
"The New York Times",
"Sunset Sound",
"Allmusic",
"Verdine White",
"Get On The Bus",
"Maurice White",
"Sonny Emory"
] |
62,112,516 |
Bankerkatta
|
Bankerkatta is a small village in Udupi district, Karnataka, India. It falls under Kidiyoor Gram Panchayat. It is located at approximately 4 km from Udupi city. Malpe Beach is just 4.8 km from Bankerkatta.
The local language spoken by people is Tulu. People can also speak and read Kannada.
The climate is hot and humid throughout the year since it is close to Arabian Sea. This region experiences heavy rainfall from June to October.
|
[
"States and territories of India",
"Udupi",
"Karnataka",
"Arabian Sea",
"Indian Standard Time",
"Udupi district",
"Tulu language",
"Udupi District",
"Taluk",
"Postal Index Number",
"Kannada language",
"Kannada",
"India",
"Malpe",
"List of districts of India"
] |
62,112,522 |
Down Under Donovan (novel)
|
Down Under Donovan is a 1918 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace.
==Film adaptation==
In 1922 it was made into a British silent film called Down Under Donovan made by Stoll Pictures and starring Cora Goffin.
|
[
"Stoll Pictures",
"United Kingdom",
"Edgar Wallace",
"Cora Goffin",
"Down Under Donovan",
"crime novel"
] |
62,112,532 |
Super Intelligence
|
Super Intelligence may refer to:
Superintelligence, a hypothetical agent that possesses intelligence far surpassing that of human minds
Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies, a 2014 book
Superintelligence (film), a 2020 film
|
[
"Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies",
"Superintelligence (film)",
"Superintelligence"
] |
62,112,538 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Julia Thorne
|
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. A consensus to Keep post addition of new RS form , that went unchallenged by Deletes after two re-lists, and was upheld. (non-admin closure) Britishfinance (talk) 00:46, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Julia Thorne===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Inadequately sourced biography of a person whose only stated claim of notability is who she happens to have been married to. "Second Lady" of a US state is not an "inherently" notable role -- note that neither her predecessor nor her successor have Wikipedia articles at all -- and she and John Kerry had divorced by the time John was a national figure, so the fact that he went on to serve as a US senator and Secretary of State, and unsuccessfully run for president, does not confer an automatic notability freebie on the ex-wife he wasn't even married to anymore.The article also states that she wrote two books, but fails to source that to the kind of coverage about the books that it would take to get her over our notability standards for writers.And the sourcing present here is not enough to get her over the "notable because sources exist" bar, either: between the single footnote and the linkfarmed external links, there's a piece of "so what do you think about the fact that your ex-husband is running for president?" human interest journalism in a local interest magazine, a short blurb about the availability of her husband's divorce records (which speaks to his notability, not hers), an obituary, and two user-generated family trees self-published by members of her own extended family -- which means two of these five links are not reliable or notability-supporting sources at all, and the three that are real media don't add up to enough media coverage to get her over WP:GNG in lieu of actually having to have her own independent notability claim. Bearcat (talk) 15:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Authors-related deletion discussions. Bearcat (talk) 15:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Women-related deletion discussions. Bearcat (talk) 15:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Massachusetts-related deletion discussions. Bearcat (talk) 15:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete being married to a prominent politician early on before they are nationally prominent does not make one notable. I would even argue for the deletion of the article on Donald Trump's first wife, except for the fact that he was nationally promient when she was his wife, and some of the ways he is referred to are heavily shaped by her statements.John Pack Lambert (talk) 17:26, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep I did some serious cleanup and found several news sources about Thorne which I added to her article. Her obituary was very large and carried in many different, large metropolitan newspapers, indicating that she's a notable person, for one thing! In addition, she comes from a large, wealthy family with historic ties. She was a socialite, which you can see from the 1970 article. She did receive recognition for her first book which led to two articles about that work. Passes GNG. Megalibrarygirl (talk) 21:21, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep - coverage, both during her life and in nationally-distributed obituaries, shows significant coverage. Her notability was gained beyond her relationship with the politician. Bearian (talk) 18:35, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Natg 19 (talk) 07:00, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, North America1000 18:28, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Keep Coverage is what counts here and there is a lot of it, on three continents. As the article grows there will be more and more sources surfacing. scope_creepTalk 12:21, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"WP:RS",
"WP:SIGCOV",
"Julia Thorne",
"WP:USERG",
"WP:SELFPUB"
] |
62,112,540 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Graybar Building
|
[
"Graybar Building",
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"WP:QPQ",
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}",
"Grand Central Terminal"
] |
|
62,112,546 |
2019 Chrono des Nations
|
The 2019 Chrono des Nations was the 38th edition of the Chrono des Nations cycle race, organised as a 1.1 race on the UCI Europe Tour, was held on 20 October 2019. The race started and finished in Les Herbiers. The race was won by Jos van Emden.
==Result==
==Result (Men U23)==
|
[
"Filippo Ganna",
"Michael Valgren",
"2020 Chrono des Nations",
"Louis Lóuvet",
"Rasmus Quaade",
"Mathias Norsgaard",
"UCI Europe Tour",
"2021 Chrono des Nations",
"Niki Terpstra",
"Michael O' Loughlin",
"Simon Verger",
"Jasper De Plus",
"Les Herbiers",
"Jan Tratnik",
"Harrison Wood",
"2018 Chrono des Nations",
"Jos van Emden",
"Thibault Guernalec",
"Martin Toft Madsen",
"Ognjen Ilic",
"Justin Wolf",
"Clément Davy",
"Mikkel Bjerg",
"UCI race classifications",
"Julien Souton",
"Chrono des Nations",
"Primož Roglič"
] |
62,112,547 |
File:Down Under Donovan.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,112,566 |
Karrie Karahalios
|
Kyratso (Karrie) G. Karahalios is an American computer scientist and professor in the Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is noted for her work on the impact of computer science on people and society, analyses of social media, and algorithm auditing. She is co-founder of the Center for People and Infrastructures at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
==Education==
She received her bachelor's degree at MIT in EECS in 1994, ME in EECS in 1995, S.M. in Media Arts and Sciences in 1997, and a PhD in Media Arts and Sciences in 2004.
==Career and research==
Karahalios joined the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2004 as an assistant professor and received tenure in 2010. In 2017 she was promoted to full professor. Her research focuses on social media and the impact of computing on society, including algorithmic bias and methods to detect and analyze such bias, a field termed "algorithm auditing". Her 2014 paper on auditing algorithms provided research methods for detecting discrimination on internet platforms has been cited more than 200 times.
Her most cited paper provides a model for predicting "tie strength" in social media, and has been cited more than 1500 times according to Google Scholar.
==ACLU suit==
In 2016, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a suit on behalf of Karahalios and several other plaintiffs against Loretta Lynch, in her official capacity as Attorney General of the United States, challenging "the constitutionality of a provision of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (“CFAA”), 18 U.S.C. § 1030 et seq., a federal statute that prohibits and chills academics, researchers, and journalists from testing for discrimination on the internet". The federal government argued against the suit, but in April 2018, a federal judge ruled that it should be permitted to continue.
==Awards and honors==
Karahalios was one of the recipients of the National Science Foundation CAREER Awards in 2007, of the A. Richard Newton Breakthrough Research Award in 2008, and of the Alfred P. Sloan Fellowships in 2010. She was named a University Scholar at the University of Illinois in 2019. She has received Best Paper awards for publications in the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI) in 2008, 2009, 2015, and 2017
|
[
"Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign",
"National Science Foundation CAREER Awards",
"Loretta Lynch",
"Massachusetts Institute of Technology",
"University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign",
"Judith Donath",
"Computer Science",
"computer scientist",
"algorithmic bias",
"Sloan Research Fellowship",
"professor",
"American Civil Liberties Union",
"Eric Gilbert"
] |
62,112,575 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Guy in The Jellyland (2018 Series)
|
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 (2018 Series)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Same topic as Guy in The Jellyland, which is nominated for deletion. Editor removed CSD template. Cannot find any evidence that this film/series exists, fails WP:GNG and WP:NMOVIE. Schazjmd (talk) 15:36, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Article has since been deleted (CSD G3), but I can't find any instructions on how to withdraw/close this nomination which is no longer needed. Schazjmd (talk) 17:41, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Film-related deletion discussions. ~~ OxonAlex - talk 16:27, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete as hoax content. Pure invention of editor. This series does not and will never exist. Geraldo Perez (talk) 17:15, 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",
"WP:NMOVIE",
"Guy in The Jellyland"
] |
62,112,584 |
Diana Reiter
|
Diana Reiter (6 November 1902 – 1943), also known as Diana Reiterówna, was a Polish-Jewish architect. A graduate of Lviv Polytechnic, she was one of the first female architects in Kraków. In 1943, she was killed at the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp during the Holocaust.
== Early life and education ==
Born in Drohobycz in 1902, she graduated from the Faculty of Architecture of Lviv Polytechnic in 1927. Between 1928 and 1931, she worked at the Directorate of Public Works of the Provincial Office in Kraków with two other architects: Zdzisław Kowalski and Adam Moscheni. From 1930 to 1931, she was a technical officer, giving opinions on the designs of newly built buildings in Krynica and dealing with appeals against decisions of the Kraków construction authorities. In 1928, the project she worked on with Kowalski and Moscheni was ranked third in the competition for the building of the Jagiellonian Library. At the request of the provincial conservator of monuments, she dealt with the restoration of the royal castle in Niepołomice. Due to the region's dwindling economic situation, however, she was dismissed at the end of 1931.
A year later, she began working at the office of Kazimierz Kulczyński, making architectural drawings until 1934. During this period, she was a member of the Union of Architects of the Kraków Province, renamed the Association of Architects of the Republic of Poland and the Union of Jewish Engineers (after 1937). Two buildings designed by her are extant: at Beliny-Prażmowskiego 26 (1933–1935) and Pawlikowskiego 16 (1937–1939)—a tenement house constructed for Józef and Eleonora Elsner.
== Death ==
Reiter lived with her mother at Królewska until the establishment of the Kraków Ghetto in 1941, two years after the German invasion of Poland during World War II. When it was liquidated, she was moved to the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp, where she would be killed in 1943, as part of the Holocaust.
== In popular culture ==
Reiter was portrayed by Romanian-Jewish actress Elina Löwensohn in the 1993 film Schindler's List, in which she is shot dead on the orders of Austrian S.S. officer Amon Göth following an argument over the foundation of the camp's barracks being built improperly.
|
[
"Invasion of Poland",
"Great Depression",
"the Holocaust",
"Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp",
"Adam Moscheni",
"Lviv Polytechnic",
"Kraków Ghetto",
"Amon Göth",
"Niepołomice Castle",
"Kazimierz Kulczyński",
"Schindler's List",
"Austria-Hungary",
"Jagiellonian Library",
"General Government",
"Drohobych",
"Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria",
"World War II",
"Schutzstaffel",
"Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)",
"Kraków",
"Zdzisław Kowalski",
"Elina Löwensohn"
] |
62,112,591 |
Category:Romanian financial businesspeople
|
[] |
|
62,112,592 |
File:Herman Meidinger.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,112,596 |
The Flying Fifty-Five (novel)
|
The Flying Fifty-Five is a 1922 sports mystery novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace set in the horse racing world.
==Film adaptations==
It has been adapted for films twice: a 1924 British silent film of the same title and a 1939 sound remake Flying Fifty-Five directed by Reginald Denham.
|
[
"mystery novel",
"United Kingdom",
"horse racing",
"Flying Fifty-Five",
"Reginald Denham",
"Edgar Wallace",
"sports novel",
"The Flying Fifty-Five (1924 film)"
] |
62,112,623 |
Category:Romanian accountants
|
[] |
|
62,112,627 |
Category:Accounting in Romania
|
[] |
|
62,112,628 |
Halim Othman
|
Abdul Halim Othman (born 28 September 1964) is a Malaysian radio and television announcer. He was the host of Roda Impian before being replaced by Hani Mohsin. He was also a host for his own talk show program the Halim Othman Live show in Astro Ria.
==Life and career==
Originally from Kemaman, Terengganu, Halim is a former student of Sultan Mahmud Science Secondary School (SESMA), Terengganu. Halim began his early career as a Selamat Pagi Malaysia (SPM) host on Radio Television Malaysia (RTM) in 1993, with the nickname 'HO' growing in popularity and sticking to the mind of his hometown fans as a host and radio presenter in his own style.
After gaining experience as an SPM host, Halim went a step further when he was selected to host the Roda Impian program, which was well received in 1996.
===Return===
In January 2010, Halim decided to join the radio station Suria FM and surprised many of his fans. Also joining the station was popular female radio host Linda Onn. Halim's presence, which runs the Breakfast @ Suria from 6am to 10am with Zizi and Viviana Layola and joins Linda in Suria 20, successfully raised the station's ratings with a 100% increase in viewership in May 2010.
In April 2016, Halim returned to the TV scene after nearly a decade.
==Television==
Roda Impian (TV3) (1996-2002)
Halim Othman Live (Astro Ria) (2005)
|
[
"calligraphy",
"Harian Metro",
"University of Tennessee",
"talk show",
"Berita Harian",
"Suria FM",
"Astro Ria",
"Sinar FM",
"Roda Impian",
"Radio Television Malaysia",
"Hani Mohsin",
"Anugerah Bintang Popular",
"The Star Online",
"Kemaman",
"Era (radio station)",
"Utusan Malaysia",
"Kosmo!",
"Radio Televisyen Malaysia",
"Malaysian people",
"TV3 (Malaysia)",
"Terengganu",
"The Star (Malaysia)"
] |
62,112,629 |
List of former places of worship on the Isle of Wight
|
there are more than 80 former places of worship on the Isle of Wight, England's largest island. The diamond-shaped, island, which lies in the English Channel and is separated from the county of Hampshire by The Solent, has a population of around 140,000 spread across several small towns and dozens of villages. Many former churches and chapels survive in alternative uses in the ancient ports of Yarmouth and Newport, the Victorian seaside resorts of Ryde, Sandown, Shanklin and Ventnor, and the twin towns of Cowes and East Cowes; and in villages and hamlets across the island, Anglican parish churches and mission churches and Nonconformist chapels have fallen of use and have been converted into houses, holiday cottages, village halls and similar.
Fifteen former churches and chapels have been awarded listed status by Historic England or its predecessor organisations in recognition of their architectural and historical interest. These include the ancient former churches in the villages of Bonchurch and St Lawrence, the ruined churches in St Helens and Thorley, former Methodist chapels in the towns of Cowes, Newport and Yarmouth, and an 18th-century malt house which briefly served as Niton's first Baptist chapel. A building is defined as "listed" when it is placed on a statutory register of buildings of "special architectural or historic interest" in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, a Government department, is responsible for listing; Historic England, a non-departmental public body, acts as an agency of the department to administer the process and advise the department on relevant issues. There are three grades of listing status. Grade I, the highest, is defined as being of "exceptional interest"; Grade II* is used for "particularly important buildings of more than special interest"; and Grade II, the lowest, is used for buildings of "special interest". As of February 2001, there were 26 Grade I-listed buildings, 55 with Grade II* status and 1,823 Grade II-listed buildings on the Isle of Wight. A further six former churches, including four tin tabernacles, have locally listed status: they are considered by the Isle of Wight Council to be "locally important [in] contributing to the character and sense of place on the Island". Such buildings must meet at least two of the following criteria: historic interest; architectural, artistic and design merit; survival; townscape merit; and archaeological interest.
==Listed status==
|
[
"commons:Category:St Catherine's Church Hall, Ventnor",
"Ryde",
"Catholic Church",
"English Channel",
"non-departmental public body",
"commons:Category:Cowes Library",
"commons:Category:St Joseph's church, Niton",
"commons:Category:Salvation Army Hall, Freshwater",
"Holy Trinity Church, Ryde",
"commons:Category:Primitive Methodist Chapel, Ryde",
"sash window",
"commons:Category:Seaview Wesleyan Chapel",
"Great Ejection",
"bell-cot",
"commons:Category:Old Church, St Lawrence, Isle of Wight",
"Hastings",
"Purbeck stone",
"Historic England",
"Bonchurch",
"Yarmouth, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Kingdom Hall, Shanklin",
"commons:Category:Roud Baptist Chapel",
"Rightmove",
"Brighstone",
"Cornerstone",
"commons:Category:Brethren Meeting Room, Abingdon Road, Ryde",
"commons:Category:Node Hill Congregational Chapel",
"commons:Category:Sandford Methodist Church",
"Hampshire",
"pilaster",
"commons:Category:Kingdom Hall, Daniel Street, Ryde",
"George Gilbert Scott",
"Percy Stone",
"Jehovah's Witnesses",
"sea mark",
"commons:Category:St Barnabas' Church, Blackwater, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Old St Swithun's Church, Thorley",
"Nursling",
"Nondenominational Christianity",
"stucco",
"Newbridge, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Apollo Theatre, Newport, Isle of Wight",
"Wetherspoons",
"commons:Category:Ventnor United Church",
"Methodism",
"Bible Christian Church",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth",
"Oculus (architecture)",
"commons:Category:St Thomas's Chapel, Ryde",
"rigging",
"commons:Category:Zion Bible Christian Chapel, Shanklin",
"commons:Category:St James's Hall, East Cowes",
"Yale University Press",
"seaside resort",
"commons:Category:United Methodist Church, Whitwell, Isle of Wight",
"Brading",
"commons:Category:Yarmouth Methodist Church, Yarmouth, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Chillerton Methodist Church",
"commons:Category:The Avenue Methodist Church, Totland",
"Norman architecture",
"parish church",
"commons:Category:Salvation Army Hall, Cowes",
"commons:Category:Bethesda Chapel, Ventnor",
"commons:Category:Mark's Corner Methodist Chapel",
"Images of England",
"Calbourne",
"commons:Category:Wesleyan Methodist Church, St Helens, Isle of Wight",
"Thomas Binney",
"Portsmouth",
"limestone",
"Hale Common",
"commons:Category:Carisbrooke Methodist Chapel",
"National school (England and Wales)",
"St Thomas of Canterbury Church, Newport, Isle of Wight",
"South Wight",
"Pevsner Architectural Guides",
"Niton",
"Baptists",
"commons:Category:Holyrood Hall, Newport, Isle of Wight",
"Lake, Isle of Wight",
"River Medina",
"Peter Paul Pugin",
"commons:Category:Merstone Methodist Church",
"St Helen's Church, St Helens, Isle of Wight",
"Redundant church",
"Sandford, Isle of Wight",
"Seaview, Isle of Wight",
"Sandown",
"commons:Category:Kingdom Hall, Ryde",
"Southampton",
"commons:Category:Ventnor Town Mission",
"commons:Category:Wootton Methodist Chapel, Wootton, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Shalfleet Methodist Church",
"Chillerton",
"Victorian restoration",
"East Sussex",
"Bay (architecture)",
"Primitive Methodist Church",
"commons:Category:Haven Street Methodist Chapel",
"Ventnor",
"commons:Category:St Helen's old church, St Helens, Isle of Wight",
"Thomas Hellyer",
"Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England",
"Saunders-Roe",
"commons:Category:Sandown United Reformed Church",
"Old St Boniface Church, Bonchurch",
"East Cowes",
"commons:Category:Free Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Cowes",
"Leadlight",
"Places of Worship Registration Act 1855",
"Bembridge",
"commons:Category:St James' Church, Kingston, Isle of Wight",
"Evangelical Fellowship of Congregational Churches",
"Newtown, Isle of Wight",
"rood screen",
"Newport, Isle of Wight",
"Bowcombe",
"Parkhurst, Isle of Wight",
"Routledge",
"The London Gazette",
"Government of the United Kingdom",
"Lancet window",
"Anglicanism",
"working men's club",
"commons:Category:Alexandra House, Cowes",
"Congregational church",
"commons:Category:Newport Congregational Church (1848 building)",
"commons:Category:Category:Holy Trinity Church, Ryde",
"commons:Category:Parkhurst Methodist Chapel",
"Shalfleet",
"The Salvation Army",
"St John Ambulance",
"pediment",
"Neoclassical architecture",
"Chale Green",
"commons:Category:Chillerton Village Hall",
"Sea Sunday",
"commons:Category:East Cowes Congregational Church",
"commons:Category:Bethesda Chapel, Newbridge, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Calbourne Methodist Chapel",
"commons:Category:Blackgang Mission Hall",
"commons:Category:Weston Manor Chapel, Totland",
"ashlar",
"chapel of ease",
"Hampshire County Council",
"Blackwater, Isle of Wight",
"Methodist Church of Great Britain",
"Ashey",
"Listed building",
"commons:Category:Bethesda Chapel, Porchfield",
"commons:Category:Northwood Methodist Chapel, Northwood, Isle of Wight",
"Congregationalist polity",
"St Lawrence, Isle of Wight",
"Merstone",
"commons:Category:Old St Boniface, Bonchurch",
"Roud, Isle of Wight",
"apse",
"Victorian era",
"St Helens, Isle of Wight",
"Porchfield",
"Norton Green",
"George Goldie (architect)",
"commons:Category:North End Bible Christian Chapel, Chale Green",
"Wroxall, Isle of Wight",
"Domesday Book",
"The Solent",
"Mausoleum",
"Plymouth Brethren",
"tin tabernacle",
"The Crystal Palace",
"commons:Category:Wesleyan Methodist Church, Sandown",
"Catholic Apostolic Church",
"commons:Category:Locks Green National School and Mission Room",
"Isle of Wight",
"Doric order",
"Ministry of Justice (United Kingdom)",
"commons:Category:Zion Bible Christian Chapel, Newport, Isle of Wight",
"commons:Category:Newport Street Chapel, Ryde",
"commons:Category:Hale Common Wesleyan Chapel",
"Victoria County History",
"Open Brethren",
"war memorial",
"Whitwell, Isle of Wight",
"Freshwater, Isle of Wight",
"Appuldurcombe House",
"commons:Category:Haylands Congregational Chapel, Ryde",
"commons:Category:St Matthew's Mission Church, Ashey",
"Rookley",
"Quakers",
"commons:Category:Broad Lane Chapel, Sandown",
"Classical architecture",
"Totland",
"commons:Category:Bembridge Wesleyan Chapel",
"William Ewart Gladstone",
"All Saints' Church, Ryde",
"Exclusive Brethren",
"bed and breakfast",
"Christian Science",
"commons:Category:Primitive Methodist Church, Wroxall",
"United Methodist Church (Great Britain)",
"commons:Category:Bowcombe Methodist Church",
"Havenstreet",
"Reformed Baptists",
"Shanklin",
"commons:Category:Brading United Reformed Church",
"commons:Category:Wesleyan Methodist Church, Ryde",
"commons:Category:Niton Village Hall",
"garrison",
"commons:Category:St John's Church, Rookley",
"Wootton, Isle of Wight",
"St George's Church, Arreton",
"commons:Category:St Andrew's Chapel, Norton Green, Isle of Wight",
"Northwood, Isle of Wight",
"Nonconformist (Protestantism)",
"commons:Category:Apse Heath Methodist Chapel",
"commons:Category:Bible Christian Chapel, Yarmouth, Isle of Wight",
"Blackgang",
"Auxiliary Fire Service",
"File:Sandford Methodist Church, Shanklin Road, Sandford (May 2016) (Foundation Stone) (4).JPG",
"Saint Boniface",
"lancet window",
"English Gothic architecture",
"Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport",
"Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990",
"commons:Category:Wesleyan Methodist Church, Blackwater, Isle of Wight",
"United Reformed Church",
"Carisbrooke",
"terracotta",
"Kingston, Isle of Wight",
"British History Online",
"malt house",
"The Dairyman's Daughter",
"William Willmer Pocock",
"Congregational Federation",
"Wesleyan Methodist Church (Great Britain)",
"commons:Category:Freshwater United Reformed Church",
"tracery",
"Cowes",
"commons:Category:Holy Cross Church, Seaview",
"Northwood House",
"commons:Category:Chale Methodist Chapel",
"Gothic Revival architecture",
"Thorley, Isle of Wight",
"Apse Heath",
"commons:Category:Free Wesleyan Chapel, Wootton, Isle of Wight",
"Baluster",
"Golden Hill Fort",
"Newchurch, Isle of Wight",
"English Heritage",
"commons:Category:Hillway Mission Hall, Bembridge",
"Isle of Wight Council",
"commons:Category:Beulah Methodist Chapel, Brighstone",
"Church of England",
"commons:Category:Seaview Methodist Church"
] |
62,112,633 |
File:The Flying Fifty-Five (novel).jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,112,640 |
Category:Quarries in Greece
|
[] |
|
62,112,646 |
Boritokay
|
{{Infobox settlement
|name = Boritokay
|native_name =
|other_name = Biao'ertuokuoyi
|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 = bottom
|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 =Wuqia
|government_footnotes =
|government_type =
|leader_title =
|leader_name =
|established_title =
|established_date =
|area_magnitude =
|unit_pref = metric
|area_footnotes =
|population_total = 6,977
|population_density_km2 =
|demographics_type2 = Ethnic groups
|demographics2_title1 = Major ethnic groups
|demographics2_info1 = Kyrgyz (بۆرىتوقاي يېزىسى / ) is a township of Wuqia County in Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China. Located in the south of the county, the township covers an area of with a population of 6,977 (as of 2017). It has 5 villages under its jurisdiction. Its seat is at Dongengiz (). Xinjiang Tuzhi () mentions a Biaolituohai () in the western part of Shufu, in the area of Boritokay.
==History==
Boritokay was the 5th township of the 3rd district in Wuqia County in 1950. It was part of Bostanterak Commune () in 1958 and Boritokay Commune () was formed from Bostanterak Commune in 1962, it was renamed Jinsong Commune () in 1968 and restored the original name in 1980, and organized as a township in 1984.
==Settlements==
The township has 5 administration villages and 21 unincorporated villages under its jurisdiction.
5 administration villages:
Aqchi Village (Aheqicun) (, , )
Ayghart Village (Ayiga'ertecun) (, , )
Boritoqay Village (Biao'ertuokuoyicun) (, , )
also named Dong'engiz, (Dun'ai'ezicun) (, , )
Saz Village (Sazicun) (, , )
Targhalaq Village (Ta'ergalakecun) (, , )
==Economy==
It is a township of semi-agriculture and semi-animal husbandry. Local wildlife include Argali, wolves, snow chicken, stone chicken, yellow sheep and so on. Ginseng and angelica grow in the area. Mineral resources include gold, copper, fossil oil and so on. The township has an area of 469.7 hectares of arable land, 355.7 hectares of forest land and 1,677 hectares of natural grassland. All the 5 villages in the township pass through the asphalt road, and mobile communication covers all the villages. There are 2 primary schools, 4 kindergartens, 1 health center, 5 clinics and 29 medical staff in the township.
|
[
"gold",
"Counties of China",
"Xinjiang People's Press",
"unincorporated village",
"arable land",
"Xinhua News Agency",
"Post-90s",
"angelica",
"Rock ptarmigan",
"Oksalur",
"wolf",
"National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency",
"grassland",
"Townships of China",
"Kyrgyz people",
"Shufu County",
"zh:国家图书馆出版社",
"China Standard Time",
"Akto County",
"Chukar partridge",
"forest",
"Kyrgyz language",
"Bostanterak",
"Autonomous regions of China",
"List of ethnic groups in China",
"fossil oil",
"Wuqia Town",
"Wuqia County",
"Xinjiang",
"Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture",
"Argali",
"Villages of China",
"mobile communication",
"copper",
"Google Cache",
"Ürümqi",
"Ginseng",
"Prefectures of China",
"Beijing",
"Internet Archive",
"asphalt road"
] |
62,112,649 |
Siege of Caen
|
The siege of Caen may refer to:
Siege of Caen (1346) English army under Edward III took the city before the Battle of Crecy during the Hundred Years' War
Siege of Caen (1417) English army under Henry V captures city during the Hundred Years' War
Siege of Caen (1450) French army retakes the city towards the end of the Hundred Years' War
|
[
"Siege of Caen (1450)",
"Siege of Caen (1346)",
"Siege of Caen (1417)"
] |
62,112,669 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Hatari (emulator)
|
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. Tone 07:52, 4 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Hatari (emulator)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Unnotable emulator. A WP:BEFORE brings up only a handful of sources that mention the project, but no significant coverage that satisfies WP:GNG. All references presently used link to the source code of the project. Lordtobi (✉) 15:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Computing-related deletion discussions. Lordtobi (✉) 15:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
* Comment: I found this:mode=cs1 |last1=Lendino |first1=Jamie |title=Faster Than Light: The Atari ST and the 16-Bit Revolution |date=2019 |publisher=Steel Gear Press |isbn=9781732355217 |page=250–253, 278 But other than this, every other source seems to be a copy of Wikipedia. flowing dreams (talk page) 06:01, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Would it be possible for you to provide scans of the pages or a smmary of the content in question? Otherwise, it is difficult to tell whether it works towards GNG. Lordtobi (✉) 07:23, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
*:: Ever since I've cited this source, I've seen its contents on Google Books once. I'm afraid I can't provide you with scans right now. If Google Books didn't give you what you want, you can try Wikipedia:WikiProject Resource Exchange. I seem to remember this source consisted four pages dedicated to Hatari. flowing dreams (talk page) 09:43, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
, indeed I see one page on Google books...and it looks like another how-to guide. Of course some features mentioned along the way (e.g. that it runs on Windows and Mac), but the coverage is nowhere near "in-depth". Lordtobi (✉) 10:27, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
*::::I don't know how to interpret that. I don't go labeling things as "how-to" and "not how-to". (If, however, I wanted to write an in-depth coverage of a piece of software, I imagine it would consist of a lot of description of how things get accomplished.) I look for impact to determine whether an article should be kept. Here, I cannot make up my mind. But if it was ever kept, that book is a good historic record of how things were, in the case the app changed significantly. flowing dreams (talk page) 10:54, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment Sources I found so far: two short paragraphs in an article about Atari emulation on Linux in micromart magazine (issue 1365, 4 June 2015, p. 68); somewhat more on heise.de in an article about emulation on Mac (Mac & i magazine, news, 03/2019 similar article on macwelt.de [https://www.macwelt.de/ratgeber/Atari-Amiga-C64-Emulator-Mac-9933413.html. Pavlor (talk) 09:33, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
Would it be possible for you to provide scans of the pages or a smmary of the content in question from the MicroMart issue? Otherwise, it is difficult to tell whether it works towards GNG. The two online articles are just how-to guides and contain no information about the software, really. Lordtobi (✉) 07:23, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Two small paragraphs certainly is not broad enough coverage to satisfy GNG, you may find the magazine on archive.org. My search for some real reviews was unsuccessful do far. Too bad, it is really nice emulator (at least the Amiga version I´m using for years). Pavlor (talk) 11:00, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: We seem to have found our WP:SIGCOV, can be really hard as offline and and subscription content can be a time consuming pain to dig out and somewhat easy to skip. From a practical point of view I might like to run a Atati emulator do its the sort of stuff I might try to ask wikipedia about to point me on some search options.Djm-leighpark (talk) 21:28, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
I don't think that we should work on the assumption of availability of [offline] sources that satisfy GNG/SIGCOV. Those online listed above are just how-to guides and don't add to SIGCOV, and I currently haven't found a way to acces either offline source to check on their quality. Lordtobi (✉) 07:23, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Natg 19 (talk) 06:59, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep: (No consensus void) The relist by was prior to letting the discussion run for 168 hours / 7 days and the nom. has now made comments above the Please add new comments below this line which I am not responding to.07:37, 27 October 2019 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Djm-leighpark (talk • contribs)
I didn't actually add a new comment, rather replied to yours. New comments/votes should be added below the relisting notice for proper chronological ordering, but everyone (including you) is free to discuss prior statements. For ease of discussion, of course, you can also reply to my above reply down here. Lordtobi (✉)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Video games-related deletion discussions. North America1000 09:04, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment Faster Than Light: The Atari ST and the 16-Bit Revolution is available as an ebook so Lordtobi can have immediate access. The relevant pages are 250–253, 255 and 278. Thincat (talk) 11:40, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Software-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 10:19, 29 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment Flowing dreams was blocked as a sock, so I've struck through their edits. Doug Weller talk 10:48, 29 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep TechRadar gives it ample coverage. Found that one quite easily. I put the two magazines mentioned into Google translator and read that, and I believe that is significant coverage enough to meet the general notability guidelines. [https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.macwelt.de%2Fratgeber%2FAtari-Amiga-C64-Emulator-Mac-9933413.html I also notice that Raspberry Pi Projects For Dummies is one of the notable For Dummies series of books, and briefly mentions it and what it is. Don't talk any about it though. It is notable enough to be mentioned all over the place, so is well known. A lot of books seem to mention it but many don't have a preview working on Google books so no idea how much is listed for it. I believe the total coverage found so far proves it is notable enough for a Wikipedia article. Dream Focus 15:02, 2 November 2019 (UTC)
Keep. Passes WP:SIGCOV per the sources provided by others here and in the article.4meter4 (talk) 18:48, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Keep. WP:SIGCOV per WP:RS Lightburst (talk) 19:55, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Weak keep There are some RS, albeit not in the quality I would like. Notability may be borderline, but there is no harm in keeping this. Pavlor (talk) 06:49, 4 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"WP:BEFORE",
"WP:RS",
"WP:SIGCOV",
"Hatari (emulator)",
"For Dummies",
"WP:IMPACT",
"TechRadar"
] |
62,112,674 |
National Development Bank of Botswana
|
{{Infobox company
| name = National Development Bank of Botswana
| logo =
| type = Parastatal
| owner = Government of Botswana
| foundation =
| location = 161 Queens Road, Central Business District
| hq_location_city = Gaborone
| hq_location_country = Botswana
| key_people = Wilfred MpaiChairman Lorato MorapediChief Executive Officer
| num_employees =
| industry = Finance
| revenue = Aftertax:BPW:168,150,000 (US$14.9 million) (2017)
==Location==
The headquarters and main branch of NDB Botswana are located at 161 Queens Road, in the central business district of Gaborone, Botswana's capital city. The bank maintains branch offices in Francistown, Maun and Palapye. The geographical coordinates of the bank's headquarters are 24°39'25.0"S, 25°55'07.0"E (Latitude:-24.656944; Longitude:25.918611).
==Overview==
NDB Botswana is a national development financial institution. While all development economic activity funding is considered, as of 2020, the focus is on funding agricultural development and the establishment of food security in Botswana.
==History==
National Development Bank of Botswana was established in 1963 by act of parliament. Its main objective is to provide financial services to Botswana's business sector. Its second objective is to earn satisfactory returns on shareholders' funds.
==Ownership==
The bank is 100 percent owned by the government of Botswana. 1. Wilfred Mpai: Chairman 2. Patricia M. Makepe: Deputy Chairperson 3. Mendel Ngoni Nlanda: Non-Executive Director 4. Olefile K. Mokatse: Non-Executive Director 5. Mmadima Nyathi: Non-Executive Director 6. Gerald N. Nthebolan: Non-Executive Director 7. Onthusitse M. Mosiakgabo: Non-Executive Director 8. Oganeditse Marata: Non-Executive Director and 9. Colleen M. Motswaiso: Non-Executive Director.
==Senior management==
The Chief Executive Officer, supervises nine other senior managers. As of July 2020, the CEO is Ms Lorato Morapedi.
|
[
"Botswana Unified Revenue Service",
"List of national development banks",
"Palapye",
"Board of Directors",
"Parastatal",
"Gaborone",
"International financial institutions",
"Government of Botswana",
"Maun, Botswana",
"Development Bank of Kenya",
"Agriculture",
"African Development Bank",
"Chairman",
"Chief Executive Officer",
"AllAfrica.com",
"government of Botswana",
"Finance",
"Uganda Development Bank Limited",
"Botswana",
"central business district",
"Francistown"
] |
62,112,682 |
Jake Gervase
|
Jake Gervase (born September 18, 1995) is an American former professional football safety. He played in the National Football League (NFL) from 2019 to 2022 for the Los Angeles Rams, with whom he won Super Bowl LVI. He played college football at Iowa.
==College career==
Gervase was a member of the Iowa Hawkeyes for five seasons, joining the team as a walk-on and redshirting his true freshman season. As a redshirt senior, he led the Hawkeyes with 89 tackles, seven passes broken up, and four interceptions and was named honorable mention All-Big Ten Conference. Gervase finished his collegiate career with 153 total tackles and seven interceptions in 44 games played.
==Professional career==
===Los Angeles Rams===
Gervase signed with the Los Angeles Rams as an undrafted free agent on May 14, 2019. Gervase was waived on August 31, as part of final roster cuts, but was re-signed to the Rams' practice squad the following day. Gervase was promoted to the Rams' active roster on October 19. He made his NFL debut the following day in a 37–10 against the Atlanta Falcons, playing one snap on defense and 13 on special teams.
On July 25, 2020, Gervase was waived by the Rams. He re-signed with the Rams on August 14. Gervase was waived on September 4. He was re-signed to their practice squad on November 3. He was placed on the practice squad/COVID-19 list by the team on November 18, and restored to the practice squad on November 28. Gervase was elevated to the active roster on December 19 for the team's week 15 game against the New York Jets, and reverted to the practice squad after the game. On January 25, 2021, Gervase signed a reserve/futures contract with the Rams. Gervase made a transition to inside linebacker for the 2021 season.
On August 31, 2021, Gervase was waived by the Rams. He was re-signed to their practice squad on September 24. Gervase was signed to the active roster on January 12, 2022. Gervase played in two games on special teams and recorded two tackles during the regular season and also played in all four of the Rams' postseason games, including the team's 23–20 win over the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI.
On May 23, 2022, Gervase re-signed with the Rams. Gervase was waived during final roster cuts on August 30. He was placed on injured reserve on December 24.
===Minnesota Vikings===
On August 24, 2023, Gervase signed with the Minnesota Vikings. He was released by the Vikings on August 28.
|
[
"Fumble",
"undrafted free agent",
"2021 Cincinnati Bengals season",
"Sioux City Journal",
"Safety (gridiron football position)",
"New York Jets",
"Atlanta Falcons",
"Davenport, Iowa",
"Touchdown",
"Interception",
"Super Bowl LVI",
"Los Angeles Rams",
"Redshirt (college sports)",
"Minnesota Vikings",
"COVID-19",
"Iowa Hawkeyes football",
"college football",
"List of All-Big Ten Conference football teams",
"Pass deflected",
"The Quad City Times",
"USA Today",
"Los Angeles Times",
"Assumption High School (Iowa)",
"Walk-on (sports)",
"National Football League",
"American football",
"Super Bowl",
"Tackle (football move)",
"Pro Day"
] |
62,112,689 |
File:BirdsofaFeather(2019film)Poster.jpg
|
==Summary==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,112,706 |
File:Ontario Tech Ridgebacks logo.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,112,712 |
Seret (Dogu'a Tembien)
|
Seret is a tabia or municipality in the Dogu'a Tembien district of the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. The tabia centre is in Inda Maryam Qorar village, located approximately 11 km to the southwest of the woreda town Hagere Selam.
== Geography ==
The tabia occupies a (locally wide) structural flat on the foot of the Tsatsen plateau, along the main road. It occupies a saddle position between the Upper Tanqwa and Zeyi River gorges. The highest location is the Tsatsen plateau (culminating at 2810 m a.s.l.) and the lowest place near Zeyi cave (2180 m a.s.l.).
=== Geology ===
From the higher to the lower locations, the following geological formations are present:
Upper basalt
Interbedded lacustrine deposits
Lower basalt
Amba Aradam Formation
Antalo Limestone
=== Geomorphology and soils ===
On the basalt rocks, the red-black soil catena is widespread: reddish soils such as Luvisols in the uplands and dark Vertisols in the plain around Inda Maryam. Here, the Vertisols are covered with stones, what evidences the vertic movements; they are also very prone to gully erosion.
The main geomorphic unit is the Hagere Selam Highlands. Corresponding soil types are:
Associated soil types
shallow soils with high stone contents (Skeletic Cambisol, Leptic Cambisol, Skeletic Regosol)
moderately deep dark stony clays with good natural fertility (Vertic Cambisol)
deep, dark cracking clays, temporarily waterlogged during the wet season (Pellic Vertisol)
Inclusions
Rock outcrops and very shallow soils (Lithic Leptosol)
Rock outcrops and very shallow soils on limestone (Calcaric Leptosol)
Deep dark cracking clays with very good natural fertility, waterlogged during the wet season (Chromic Vertisol, Pellic Vertisol)
Shallow stony dark loams on calcaric material (Calcaric Regosol, Calcaric Cambisol)
Brown loamy soils on basalt with good natural fertility (Luvisol)
=== Climate and hydrology ===
==== Climate and meteorology ====
The rainfall pattern shows a very high seasonality with 70 to 80% of the annual rain falling in July and August. Mean temperature in Inda Maryam is 17 °C, oscillating between average daily minimum of 9.4 °C and maximum of 24.3 °C. The contrasts between day and night air temperatures are much larger than seasonal contrasts.
==== Rivers ====
The Giba River and its tributary the Tanqwa are the most important rivers in the surroundings of the tabia. They flow towards Tekezze River and further on to the Nile. These rivers have incised deep gorges which characterise the landscape.
The drainage network of the tabia is organised as follows:
Giba River
Zeyi River, at the border of tabias Simret and Walta
Zeleqwa River, which becomes Ruba Dirho near Seret, and Tanqwa River, in the woredas Kola Tembien and Abergele (woreda)
Tsech'i River, in tabias Seret, Menachek and Aregen
May Dechena, with its source in Inda Maryam
Whereas they are (nearly) dry during most of the year, during the main rainy season, these rivers carry high runoff discharges, sometimes in the form of flash floods. Especially at the beginning of the rainy season, they are brown-coloured, evidencing high soil erosion rates.
==== Springs ====
As there are no permanent rivers, the presence of springs is of utmost importance for the local people. The main springs in the tabia are:
Dechena in Inda Maryam Qorar
May Weyni in the homonymous village
May Ch’ech’ati in a gorge draining the Tsatsen plateau
==== Water harvesting ====
In this area with rains that last only for a couple of months per year, reservoirs of different sizes allow harvesting runoff from the rainy season for further use in the dry season.
Traditional surface water harvesting ponds, particularly in places without permanent springs, called rahaya
Horoyo, household ponds, recently constructed through campaigns
=== Settlements ===
The tabia centre Inda Maryam Qorar holds a few administrative offices, a health post, a primary school, and some small shops. Saturday is the market day. The farmers have adapted their cropping systems to the spatio-temporal variability in rainfall.
The introduction of apples for cultivation in backyards by smallholder farmers was especially successful in Mashih, some 5 km to the east of Inda Maryam.
== History and culture ==
=== History ===
The history of the tabia is strongly confounded with the history of Tembien.
=== Religion and churches ===
Most inhabitants are Orthodox Christians. The following churches are located in the tabia:
Maryam Qorar
Maryam Mashih
Abune Selama, on a mountain peak at the boundary to Mika'el Abiy
Addi Mishahan Mika'el
=== Inda Siwa, the local beer houses ===
In the main villages, there are traditional beer houses (Inda Siwa), often in unique settings, where people socialise. Well known in the tabia are though in some schools there is lack of classrooms, directly related to the large intake in primary schools over the last decades. Schools in the tabia include Mashih school.
== Tourism ==
Its mountainous nature and proximity to Mekelle make the tabia fit for tourism. As compared to many other mountain areas in Ethiopia the villages are quite accessible, and during walks visitors may be invited for coffee, lunch or even for an overnight stay in a rural homestead. In Inda Maryam Qorar there are very basic hotels, mainly used by pilgrims on their way to Dabba Hadera monastery.
=== Touristic attractions ===
Tsatsen plateau with views
=== Geotouristic sites ===
The high variability of geological formations and the rugged topography invite for geological and geographic tourism or "geotourism". Geosites in the tabia include:
Inda Maryam extensive Vertisol area
Views to adjacent gorges
Apple cultivation in Mashih
Exclosures managed by “Trees for Farmers” in the northeast of the tabia
=== Trekking routes ===
Trekking routes have been established, with starting point in Inda Maryam Qorar'. The tracks are not marked on the ground but can be followed using downloaded .GPX files.
Trek 7, to Debre Sema'it rock church, and on to Abiy Addi
Trek 8, from Tsatsen, through Inda Maryam to Zeyi cave and on the Giba River gorge
Trek 8V, to Dabba Hadera monastery
Trek 19, to Debre Sema'it rock church, and on to Agbe
|
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62,112,714 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/kidya.ir
|
== Links ==
kidya.ir resolves to [//185.141.168.50 185.141.168.50]
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 13 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,112,718 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/ipsaloquitur.com
|
== Links ==
ipsaloquitur.com resolves to [//192.0.78.215 192.0.78.215]
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.
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Displayed all 12 additions.
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"en:User:COIBot"
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62,112,720 |
Timeline of the Theodore Roosevelt presidency
|
The presidency of Theodore Roosevelt began on September 14, 1901, when Theodore Roosevelt was inaugurated as the 26th president of the United States following the assassination of William McKinley, and it ended on March 4, 1909.
== 1901 ==
September 14 - The first inauguration of Theodore Roosevelt takes place following the death of William McKinley.
September 15 - Roosevelt and the cabinet attend memorial services for McKinley.
September 16 - Roosevelt and the cabinet escort McKinley's body to Washington, D.C.
September 20 - Roosevelt holds his first cabinet meeting.
September 28 - The Battle of Balangiga occurs in the Philippines.
October 16 - Roosevelt meets Booker T. Washington at the White House.
October 17 - Roosevelt gives the White House its official name.
October 23 - Roosevelt receives an honorary doctorate of law from Yale University.
October 29 - Leon Czolgosz is executed for the murder of William McKinley.
November 14 - Roosevelt expands the Navajo Nation.
November 18 - The United States and Great Britain sign the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty.
November 30 - Roosevelt fires Oklahoma Territory governor William Miller Jenkins and replaces him with Thompson Benton Ferguson.
December 3 - Roosevelt delivers the 1901 State of the Union Address.
December 13 - Roosevelt inherits a fortune from his late uncle Cornelius Roosevelt.
== 1902 ==
January 3 - Roosevelt's daughter Alice Roosevelt is presented as a debutante.
January 8 - Postmaster General Charles Emory Smith resigns. He's replaced by Henry Clay Payne.
January 31 - Secretary of the Treasury Lyman J. Gage resigns to work in the private sector.
February 1 - L. M. Shaw takes office as Secretary of the Treasury.
February 18 - Roosevelt orders the prosecution of the Northern Securities Company for violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.
February 24 - Roosevelt meets Prince Henry of Prussia at the White House.
February 25 - Roosevelt and Prince Henry of Prussia travel to New York.
April 22 - Roosevelt orders the court martial of Jacob H. Smith for his actions at the Battle of Balangiga.
April 29 - The Chinese Exclusion Act is extended indefinitely.
April 30 - Secretary of the Navy John Davis Long resigns. He is replaced by William Henry Moody.
May 12 - The coal strike of 1902 begins.
May 20 - Cuba gains independence from the United States.
May 22 - Crater Lake is established as a National Park.
May 31 - Roosevelt orders a 14% reduction of the United States Army.
June 16 - Roosevelt meets the first Cuban ambassador to the United States.
June 17 - Roosevelt signs the Newlands Reclamation Act into law.
July 2 - The Philippine–American War ends.
July 4 - Roosevelt issues amnesty for all Filipino participates of the Philippine-American War.
August 22 - Roosevelt becomes the first sitting president to ride in an automobile.
October 3 - Roosevelt personally arbitrates the coal strike.
November 4 - Republicans maintain control of both chambers of Congress in the 1902 United States elections.
December 2 - Roosevelt delivers the 1902 State of the Union Address.
December 2 - Roosevelt nominates Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. to the Supreme Court.
December 4 - Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. is confirmed as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
== 1903 ==
January 2 - Roosevelt orders a post office in Indianola, Mississippi closed after they refuse to accept an African American postmistress.
February 11 - Roosevelt signs the Expediting Act into law.
February 14 - The Department of Commerce and Labor is created.
February 19 - Roosevelt signs the Elkins Act into law as part of his Square Deal.
February 19 - Roosevelt nominates William R. Day to the Supreme Court.
February 23 - William R. Day is confirmed as an associate justice of the Supreme Court.
March 3 - Roosevelt signs the Immigration Act of 1903.
May 14 - Roosevelt visits San Francisco.
November 3 - Panama declares independence with United States backing.
November 18 - The United States and Panama sign the Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty.
December 7 - Roosevelt delivers the 1903 State of the Union Address.
== 1904 ==
January 29 - Edith Roosevelt hosts a performance by Ferruccio Busoni at the White House.
January 31 - Secretary of War Elihu Root resigns to work in the private sector.
February 1 - William Howard Taft takes office as Secretary of War.
February 1 - Roosevelt meets with Bat Masterson at the White House.
February 11 - Roosevelt declares neutrality in the Russo-Japanese War.
February 22 - A mentally ill man with a revolver is arrested at the White House.
February 23 - The United States purchases the Panama Canal Zone.
April 15 - Roosevelt arrives in New Castle, Colorado for a hunting trip.
April 27 - Roosevelt falls ill and delays his hunting trip.
June 21 - Roosevelt is chosen as the Republican presidential nominee for 1904.
June 30 - Attorney General Philander C. Knox resigns to serve as a U.S. Senator. Several cabinet secretaries are moved into new positions.
July 1 - The Cuban–American Treaty of Relations comes into effect.
October 4 - Postmaster General Henry Clay Payne dies at the age of 60.
October 10 - Robert Wynne takes office as Postmaster General.
November 8 - Roosevelt wins reelection against Alton B. Parker.
December 6 - Roosevelt establishes the Roosevelt Corollary as he delivers the 1904 State of the Union Address.
December 12 - The Battle of Dolores River occurs in the Philippines.
== 1905 ==
January 20 - The United States takes control of the foreign affairs of the Dominican Republic.
February 1 - The National Forest Service is established.
March 4 - The second inauguration of Theodore Roosevelt takes place.
March 17 - Roosevelt attends the wedding of his niece Eleanor Roosevelt and distant cousin Franklin D. Roosevelt.
June 30 - Secretary of the Navy Paul Morton resigns. He is replaced by Charles Joseph Bonaparte.
July 1 - Secretary of State John Hay dies of a heart condition at the age of 66.
July 19 - Former Secretary of War Elihu Root takes office as Secretary of State.
July 27 - The Taft–Katsura agreement is made between Secretary of War William Howard Taft and Japanese Prime Minister Katsura Tarō.
September 5 - Roosevelt facilitates the signing of the Treaty of Portsmouth between Japan and Russia, ending the Russo-Japanese War.
October 22 - The Battle of the Malalag River occurs in the Philippines.
December 5 - Roosevelt delivers the 1905 State of the Union Address.
== 1906 ==
March 5 - The First Battle of Bud Dajo occurs in the Philippines.
April 14 - Roosevelt denounces the practice of muckracking in the progressive movement.
April 18 - The San Francisco earthquake kills up to 3,000 people and destroys over 80% of the city of San Francisco
May 8 - Roosevelt signs the Burke Act into law.
June 8 - Roosevelt signs the Antiquities Act into law.
June 16 - Roosevelt signs the Oklahoma Enabling Act into law.
June 29 - Roosevelt signs the Hepburn Act into law.
June 30 - Roosevelt signs the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Federal Meat Inspection Act into law.
August 12 - The Brownsville affair begins.
August 23 - Cuban President Tomás Estrada Palma requests American military assistance.
September 24 - Roosevelt establishes Devils Tower as the first national monument.
October 6 - American soldiers arrive in Cuba and the Second Occupation of Cuba begins.
November 6 - Republicans maintain control of both chambers of Congress in the 1906 United States elections.
November 9 - Roosevelt visits the Panama Canal Zone to oversee the construction of the Panama Canal, becoming the first sitting president to leave the mainland United States.
December 3 - Roosevelt delivers the 1906 State of the Union Address.
December 3 - Roosevelt nominates Attorney General William Henry Moody to the Supreme Court.
December 10 - Roosevelt is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in ending the Russo-Japanese War, becoming the first American to win a Nobel Prize.
December 12 - William Henry Moody is confirmed as an associate justice of the Supreme Court. Several cabinet secretaries are moved into new positions.
== 1907 ==
January 1 - Roosevelt sets the record of most hands shaken in one day by a head of state with 8,513.
January 14 - Postmaster General George B. Cortelyou resigns. He's replaced by Ambassador to Russia George von Lengerke Meyer.
January 26 - Roosevelt signs the Tillman Act of 1907 into law.
February 15 - The Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907 is signed by the United States and Japan.
February 20 - Roosevelt signs the Immigration Act of 1907 into law.
February 26 - Roosevelt appoints General George Washington Goethals chief engineer of the Panama Canal.
March 3 - Secretary of the Treasury L. M. Shaw resigns to work in the private sector.
March 4 - George B. Cortelyou takes office as Secretary of the Treasury. Secretary of the Interior Ethan A. Hitchcock resigns and is replaced by James Rudolph Garfield.
June 11 - The War of 1907 begins.
June 15 - The Second International Peace Conference is held at Roosevelt's request.
October 22 - The Panic of 1907 begins.
November 3 - Roosevelt approves U.S. Steel's takeover of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company.
November 16 - Oklahoma is admitted as the 46th state.
December 3 - Roosevelt delivers the 1907 State of the Union Address.
December 16 - The Great White Fleet begins its voyage.
== 1908 ==
January 11 - Roosevelt establishes the Grand Canyon as a national monument.
June 16 - William Howard Taft is nominated as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party.
June 30 - William Howard Taft resigns as Secretary of War to campaign for the presidency.
July 1 - Luke Edward Wright takes office as Secretary of War.
November 3 - William Howard Taft is elected president, defeating William Jennings Bryan.
November 30 - Secretary of the Navy Victor H. Metcalf resigns for health reasons. He is replaced by Assistant Secretary of the Navy Truman Handy Newberry.
December 9 - Roosevelt delivers the 1908 State of the Union Address.
== 1909 ==
January 27 - Secretary of State Elihu Root resigns to serve as a U.S. Senator. He is replaced by Robert Bacon the same day.
February 6 - The Second Occupation of Cuba ends with the withdrawal of American soldiers.
March 4 - The inauguration of William Howard Taft takes place.
|
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62,112,722 |
Council Offices, Caernarfon
|
The Council Offices () is a municipal facility at Shirehall Street in Caernarfon, Wales. The structure, which is the headquarters of Gwynedd Council, is a Grade II listed building.
==History==
The current structure was commissioned as the county prison to replace an earlier gaol on the site which had been designed by Joseph Turner and completed in 1793.
The new building, which was designed in the Gothic style, was completed in 1869.
The site incorporated a medieval tower (known as the Hanging Tower) that once formed part of the town walls. The last execution in the prison, the hanging of the labourer, William Murphy, for the murder of his girlfriend, Gwen Ellen Jones, was carried out by Henry Pierrepoint at the Hanging Tower on 15 February 1910. The building closed as a prison in 1921 and was subsequently converted to create additional offices for Caernarvonshire County Council which was based immediately to the south in the old County Hall. A tower with an archway for vehicles, displaying the brightly painted new coat of arms of Gwynedd County Council and topped with a mansard roof, was subsequently erected at the north end of the long north-south prison block; this created a link, at first floor level, with the office facilities in Gwylfa.
A modern office block providing additional facilities was built between Castle Street and Shirehall Street in the 1980s.
On 1 April 1996, following implementation of the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, the complex became the local seat of government for the new local authority in the area, Gwynedd Council.
|
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62,112,724 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/chinookmedicalcentre.com
|
== Links ==
chinookmedicalcentre.com resolves to [//160.153.96.163 160.153.96.163]
Link is not on the blacklist.
COIBot domainredlist search for link chinookmedicalcentre.com gives:
chinookmedicalcentre.com (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
chinookmedicalcentre.com (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
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None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \bchinookmedicalcentre\.com\b on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist (diff - )).
Link is blacklisted by \bchinookmedicalcentre\.com\b on [//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist en.wikipedia.org]
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 43 additions.
|
[
"en:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist",
"en:User:COIBot",
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62,112,725 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/chinookmedicalcentre.com
|
== Links ==
chinookmedicalcentre.com resolves to [//160.153.96.163 160.153.96.163]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 41 additions out of 41 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/chinookmedicalcentre.com
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bchinookmedicalcentre\.com\b# ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/chinookmedicalcentre.com]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 16:04, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 05:51, 2 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 04:24, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 04:28, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 04:31, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
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New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 04:36, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 04:40, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 04:42, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 04:44, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 04:46, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
|
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62,112,732 |
Siege of Caen (1450)
|
The siege of Caen took place in 1450 during the Hundred Years War when French forces laid siege to Caen in the English-controlled Normandy following their decisive victory at the Battle of Formigny.
After Formigny, the remnants of the English Army under Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset withdrew to Caen, pursued by the much larger French army commanded by Arthur de Richemont. After three weeks of siege Somerset surrendered. English control of Normandy rapidly collapsed, ending with the loss of Cherbourg in August.
|
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62,112,733 |
Silver Dust
|
Silver Dust is a Swiss rock band formed in 2013 in Porrentruy by the singer and guitarist Lord Campbell. He is especially known under his real name, Christian "Kiki" Crétin, as former professional ice hockey goaltender. After having performed on various stages in Switzerland, including the Montreux Jazz Festival, Silver Dust gained popularity throughout Europe thanks to their tours with the heavy metal Finnish bands Lordi (2016 and 2018) and Battle Beast (2017).
At the end of 2019, Silver Dust started their fourth European tour consisting of 50 dates in 26 countries together with Moonspell and Rotting Christ.
Silver Dust has their unique music style brightened up with a scenic presence on stage composed of steampunk and Victorian influences. The band is often classified as "Burtonian" (referring to American filmmaker Tim Burton) by the media that describe its style under the name of "theatrical rock".
== History ==
=== Creation and early years — Lost In Time (2013-2015) ===
Silver Dust was formed in 2013 by singer and guitarist Lord Campbell. After having led many personal musical projects covering the songs of guitar-virtuosos such as Steve Vai and Joe Satriani, he decided to create a project that combines music and theatrical show. For that, he engaged the services of his faithful bassist and longstanding friend, Kurghan, who has been present since the beginning.
On May 25, 2013, Silver Dust released their first album, Lost In Time. A few months later, the band performed at the famous Montreux Jazz Festival and was chosen as the opening act in many national festivals, which offered them the opportunity to play together with renowned bands such as Deftones, The Offspring, Eluvietie or Mass Hysteria. In addition, the song So Let Me Now was broadcast on the radio across Switzerland and its music video was a considerable success.
In the course of 2014, two changes were made in the line-up. Firstly, the drummer Cedric was invited to leave the band and was replaced by Mr.Killjoy. A few months later, Jayer, the guitarist, decided to dedicate himself to his personal projects and was replaced by Tiny Pistol.
In February 2015, the band entered the studio to record their second album. They also announced the filming of a music video. At the end of the year, Silver Dust began a collaboration with the Swiss label Escudero Records.
=== Rise — The Age Of Decadence (2016-2017) ===
In early 2016, Silver Dust unveiled the name and cover of their new album named The Age Of Decadence. On February 6, 2016, the band released the second music video of its history for one of the songs of the new album, My Heart Is My Savior.
On March 4, 2016, Silver Dust plays for the first time the songs of the new album, The Age Of Decadence, during a concert organized especially for the occasion in Neuchâtel. During the same night, the band also unveiled a new show thought up to go along with the album using an atmosphere combining the good and the bad, often represented by references to white magic and black magic. A large screen representing a magic mirror appears on stage and is used to show images in relation to the songs being played. In addition, the show is marked by the appearance of many actors, including a cursed couple and some characters dressed with black cloaks and masks.
On April 7, 2016, Silver Dust won the finale of a contest organized by the famous Greenfield Festival and, as a result, was selected to share the stage with Nightwish and Amon Amarth. A few weeks later, the bands released a new music video in collaboration with Carlyn Monnin, a Swiss lyric soprano, who puts her voice on the unplugged version of the song Forgive Me.
In the same year, Silver Dust hit the road for their first European tour together with the Finnish heavy metal band Lordi. The bands performed more than thirty times all over Europe.
After this tour, Silver Dust signed with the German label Fastball Music that arranged the release of the album The Age Of Decadence across the continent
In November 2017, the quartet returned on European stages as the special guest of the Finnish heavy metal band Battle Beast. At the end of the year, Silver Dust ended "The Age Of Decadence" tour by announcing the upcoming release of their third album.
=== Revelation — House 21 (2018-2021) ===
In late March 2018, Silver Dust released a music video for Forever, a single from the album. In a similar way to the previous music videos, this one is filmed in Porrentruy in Switzerland.
On April 20, 2018, the band released its third opus, House 21, in the form of a concept album. It tells the story of a British soldier deserting the battlefield during World War II and taking refuge in a gloomy dwelling, called House 21, populated by errant souls and strange characters. The album includes a collaboration with Mr. Lordi, from the eponym band, on a cover of Bette Davis Eyes.
A few months later, to everyone's great surprise, Mr.Killjoy, the drummer, announced his desire to leave the band. He is then replaced by Magma, drummer formed by Diego Rapacchietti from the Swiss band Coroner.
In October of the same year, the band went on another tour with Lordi. This new tour marks the second large-scale collaboration between the two bands.
In July 2019, Silver Dust announced that their fourth European tour would take place at the end of the year, from October to December. For this occasion, the band toured with two well-known metal bands: Moonspell and Rotting Christ.
On March 1, 2020, the band announced the arrival of their new guitarist, Neiros. He replaces Tiny Pistol who has judged not being anymore able to fulfill his role in the band due to personal issues.
=== Consecration — Lullabies (2022-present) ===
On April 29, 2022, Silver Dust released their fourth album, Lullabies. It reached the 8th position on the Metal Rock Charts in Germany. Throughout the year, Silver Dust performed at several renowned festivals across Europe, sharing the stage with notable bands such as KISS, Avatar, Scorpions, Sabaton, Powerwolf, Helloween, and Europe, among others. The band's performances at Paléo Festival, Rock Imperium Festival, and Riverside Festival were highly acclaimed and well-received.
At the beginning of 2023, Silver Dust was invited to join the Swedish band Soen on a European tour as a special guest. Additionally, this year marked another milestone for the band as they performed at the Summerside Festival alongside renowned acts such as Hollywood Vampires (featuring Alice Cooper, Johnny Depp, and Joe Perry) and Volbeat.
In July 2024, the band announced the departure of their drummer Magma, who left the band for professional reasons. Drummer Mr. Killjoy, a former member of the group from 2014 to 2018, rejoined temporarily to fulfill scheduled performances, including headlining Hellfest Le Off, while the band searched for a new drummer.
On January 21, 2025, Silver Dust officially announced the return of Mr. Killjoy as their drummer, along with the release of a new album set for April 4, 2025.
== Members ==
ImageSize = width:900 height:auto barincrement:18
PlotArea = left:100 bottom:100 top:0 right:20
Alignbars = justify
DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy
Period = from:01/01/2013 till:01/01/2025
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy
Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:1
ScaleMajor = increment:1 start:2013
ScaleMinor = increment:1 start:2014
Colors =
id:lead value:blue legend:Guitare,_Chant
id:guitar value:orange legend:Guitare
id:bass value:red legend:Basse
id:drums value:green legend:Batterie
id:album value:black legend:Albums
id:bars value:gray(0.93)
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at:03/04/2016
at:04/20/2018
at:04/29/2022
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bar:LordCampbell text:"Lord Campbell"
bar:Kurghan text:"Kurghan"
bar:Jayer text:"Jayer"
bar:TinyPistol text:"Tiny Pistol"
bar:Neiros text:"Neiros"
bar:Cedric text:"Cedric"
bar:MrKilljoy text:"Mr.Killjoy"
bar:Magma text:"Magma"
PlotData=
width:11
bar:LordCampbell from:start till:end color:lead
bar:Kurghan from:start till:end color:bass
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bar:TinyPistol from:08/10/2014 till:02/29/2020 color:guitar
bar:Neiros from:03/01/2020 till:end color:guitar
bar:Cedric from:start till:03/25/2014 color:drums
bar:MrKilljoy from:03/25/2014 till:08/29/2018 color:drums
bar:MrKilljoy from:07/10/2024 till:end color:drums
bar:Magma from:08/29/2018 till:07/10/2024 color:drums
=== Current members ===
Lord Campbell – lead vocals, guitar
Kurghan – bass, backing vocals
Neiros – guitar, backing vocals
Mr.Killjoy – drums
=== Former members ===
Tiny Pistol – guitar, backing vocals (2014-2020)
Magma – drums (2018-2024)
Jayer – guitar, backing vocals (2013-2014)
Cedric – drums (2013-2014)
== Discography ==
=== Studio albums ===
2013 : Lost In Time
2016 : The Age Of Decadence
2018 : House 21
2022 : Lullabies
=== Music videos ===
2014 : So Let Me Know
2016 : My Heart Is My Savior
2016 : Forgive Me (unplugged version)
2018 : Forever
2022 : There's A Place Where I Can Go
|
[
"Joe Satriani",
"Avatar (band)",
"Large-screen television technology",
"Johnny Depp",
"Steve Vai",
"Montreux Jazz Festival",
"Tim Burton",
"Deftones",
"ArcInfo (newspaper)",
"Joe Perry (musician)",
"Bassist",
"white magic",
"Powerwolf",
"Europe (band)",
"20 Minuten",
"lyric soprano",
"Rock music",
"Lordi",
"The Offspring",
"Porrentruy",
"concept album",
"Coroner (band)",
"steampunk",
"ice hockey",
"Greenfield Festival",
"Lead vocalist",
"Finland",
"Alice Cooper",
"YouTube",
"Moonspell",
"Heavy metal music",
"Battle Beast (band)",
"Mass Hysteria (band)",
"Volbeat",
"Backing vocalist",
"music video",
"goaltender",
"Sabaton (band)",
"Guitarist",
"Eluveitie",
"Mr Lordi",
"Drummer",
"Kiss (band)",
"Switzerland",
"World War II",
"Bette Davis Eyes",
"Scorpions (band)",
"Neuchâtel",
"Amon Amarth",
"Helloween",
"Paléo Festival",
"Hollywood Vampires (band)",
"Victorian fashion",
"Soen",
"Rotting Christ",
"black magic",
"Nightwish"
] |
62,112,742 |
2020–21 Danish Superliga
|
The 2020–21 Danish Superliga (officially the 3F Superliga for sponsorship reasons) was the 31st season of the Danish Superliga. The season began on 11 September with reigning champions FC Midtjylland playing against the winners of the Danish Cup, SønderjyskE, losing 2–0 away from home.
This season marked the first season with the video assistant referee (VAR) system.
==Teams==
Twelve teams competed in the league – the top ten teams from the previous season, the winner of the Relegation Playoffs and the champion of the 2019–20 Danish 1st Division. Lyngby BK retained its position in the Superliga by winning the Relegation Playoffs and Vejle BK joined the top flight after winning the 1st Division title.
===Stadiums and locations===
===Personnel and sponsoring===
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and Managers may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
===Managerial changes===
==Regular season==
===League table===
===Positions by round===
===Results===
==Championship round==
Points and goals carried over in full from the regular season.
===Positions by round===
Below the positions per round are shown. As teams did not all start with an equal number of points, the initial pre-playoffs positions are also given.
==Relegation round==
Points and goals carried over in full from the regular season.
===Positions by round===
Below the positions per round are shown. As teams did not all start with an equal number of points, the initial pre-playoffs positions are also given.
==European play-offs==
The fourth-placed team of the championship round, AGF, advanced to a Europa Conference League play-off match against the winning team of the relegation round, AaB. The winners earned a place in the Europa Conference League second qualifying round.
===European play-off match===
==Season statistics==
===Top goalscorers===
As of 28 May 2021.
|
[
"Tom van Weert",
"Anders K. Jacobsen",
"Albani Brewery",
"AaB Fodbold",
"Kamaldeen Sulemana",
"F.C. Copenhagen",
"AC Horsens",
"Flemming Pedersen (football manager)",
"MCH Arena",
"Patrick Mortensen",
"Christian Nielsen (football manager)",
"FIFA",
"Bror Blume",
"Odense Boldklub",
"Erik Marxen",
"FC Midtjylland",
"2020–21 Danish Cup",
"Kasper Kusk",
"Martin Ørnskov",
"Niels Frederiksen",
"Royal Unibrew",
"Vejle Boldklub",
"Iver Fossum",
"CASA Arena Horsens",
"Lucas Andersen",
"Michael Hemmingsen",
"Puma SE",
"FC Nordsjælland",
"video assistant referee",
"Bo Henriksen",
"2021-22 UEFA Europa League",
"Brian Priske",
"Parken Stadium",
"Aarhus",
"Farum Park",
"Carit Falch",
"2021–22 Danish 1st Division",
"Martí Cifuentes",
"Haderslev Football Stadium",
"Nike, Inc.",
"Jacob Friis (footballer)",
"Marc Pedersen",
"Haji Wright",
"Vito Hammershøy-Mistrati",
"2021–22 UEFA Europa League",
"Constantin Gâlcă",
"Alhaji Kamara",
"2021–22 UEFA Champions League",
"Jacob Schoop",
"DHL",
"Thomas Thomasberg",
"2021-22 UEFA Champions League",
"2020–21 Danish Superliga",
"Ståle Solbakken",
"Spar Nord",
"Copenhagen Derby",
"Arbejdernes Landsbank",
"Atletion",
"Lyngby Stadium",
"Randers FC",
"Lyngby Boldklub",
"Grass",
"Hallur Hansson",
"Mikael Uhre",
"Allan Sousa",
"FC Copenhagen",
"Brøndby IF",
"Vejle Stadium",
"Brøndby Stadium",
"Randers Stadium",
"Aarhus Stadium",
"Issam Jebali",
"Zeca (Greek footballer)",
"Nordjyske Arena",
"2019–20 Danish 1st Division",
"2021–22 Danish Superliga",
"Nicolai Larsen",
"Kamil Wilczek",
"Jens Berthel Askou",
"Jonas Wind",
"Glen Riddersholm",
"Jess Thorup",
"David Nielsen",
"Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson",
"SønderjyskE Fodbold",
"Jesper Lindstrøm",
"2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League",
"Adidas",
"2019–20 Danish Superliga",
"2019–20 Danish Cup",
"Vejle BK",
"Sory Kaba",
"Erik Sviatchenko",
"Jakob Michelsen",
"Carlsberg Group",
"Danish Superliga",
"Aarhus Gymnastikforening",
"Lyngby BK",
"Jens Grabski Maae",
"Jonas Dal",
"Janus Drachmann",
"Peter Feher",
"Hummel International",
"Odense Stadium",
"Niklas Backman",
"Hybrid grass",
"Andreas Maxsø"
] |
62,112,747 |
2020–21 Danish 2nd Divisions
|
The 2020–21 Danish 2nd Divisions will be divided in two groups of fourteen teams. The top team of each group will be promoted to the 2021–22 Danish 1st Division. This will be the last season with two groups, and after the season the clubs placed 2-6 in each group will qualify for the new Danish tier 3, and teams placed 7-10 in each group will qualify for the new Danish tier 4. The bottom four clubs in each group will be relegated to the Denmark Series.
==Participants==
==Group 1==
===League table===
==Group 2==
===League table===
|
[
"Akademisk Boldklub",
"Denmark Series",
"FA 2000",
"BK Frem",
"KFUM Roskilde",
"2015–16 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"BK Avarta",
"Thisted FC",
"VSK Aarhus",
"2017–18 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"Holbæk B&I",
"AB Tårnby",
"2021–22 Danish 3rd Division",
"2016–17 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"2021–22 Danish 1st Division",
"Middelfart G&BK",
"Aarhus Fremad",
"Vanløse IF",
"Holstebro BK",
"Boldklubben af 1893",
"Hillerød Fodbold",
"SfB-Oure FA",
"Nykøbing FC",
"Holstebro Boldklub",
"2021–22 Danish 2nd Division",
"Skovshoved IF",
"2013–14 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"2019–20 Danish 1st Division",
"Næsby BK",
"FC Roskilde",
"Brønshøj BK",
"Middelfart Gymnastik & Boldklub",
"FC Sydvest 05",
"B.93",
"AB Gladsaxe",
"Jammerbugt FC",
"Brabrand IF",
"Slagelse B&I",
"2012–13 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"2019–20 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"2019–20 Denmark Series",
"2018–19 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"Brønshøj Boldklub",
"Dalum IF",
"Næstved BK",
"Hellerup IK",
"Boldklubben Frem",
"2008–09 Danish 2nd Divisions"
] |
62,112,748 |
2020–21 Danish 1st Division
|
The 2020–21 Danish 1st Division (known as the NordicBet Liga for sponsorship purposes) marked the 25th season of the league operating as the second tier of Danish football and the 81st season overall under the 1st Division name. The league is governed by the Danish Football Association (DBU).
From this season a promotion round for the six best placed teams and a relegation round for the six lowest placed teams are introduced. The top two teams of the promotion round are promoted to the 2021–22 Danish Superliga. The teams in 11th and 12th places are relegated to the 2021–22 Danish 2nd Division.
==Participants==
Silkeborg IF, and Esbjerg fB finished last in the 2019–20 Danish Superliga relegation play-off and were relegated to the 1st Division. Hobro IK lost to Lyngby Boldklub in the relegation play off and was relegated as well. Vejle Boldklub was promoted to the 2020–21 Danish Superliga.
Nykøbing FC, FC Roskilde and Næstved BK were relegated to the 2020–21 Danish 2nd Divisions. Nykøbing FC was relegated after four seasons in the league, FC Roskilde after six seasons, and Næstved BK after two seasons. FC Helsingør won promotion from the 2019–20 Danish 2nd Divisions. They won promotion after only one season's absence.
=== Stadia and locations ===
=== Personnel and sponsoring ===
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and Managers may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
=== Managerial changes ===
==Regular season==
===League table===
==Results==
===Regular season===
==Promotion Group==
Points and goals carry over in full from the regular season.
==Relegation Group==
Points and goals carry over in full from the regular season.
==Season statistics==
===Top goalscorers===
.
|
[
"Per Frandsen",
"F.C. Copenhagen",
"AC Horsens",
"Helsingør Stadium",
"Danish 1st Division",
"FIFA",
"Esbjerg",
"Peter Sørensen (footballer)",
"BK Fremad Amager",
"Jakob Bonde",
"Hjørring Stadion",
"Vejle Boldklub",
"Viborg Stadium",
"Kristoffer Wichmann",
"Michael Kryger",
"Morten Mølkjær",
"Nordjyske Bank",
"Jeppe Grønning",
"Skive (Denmark)",
"Puma SE",
"Vendsyssel FF",
"Blue Water Arena",
"DS Arena",
"Herfølge",
"Nykøbing FC",
"Hvidovre IF",
"Jonas Damborg",
"Køge Idrætspark",
"Skive IK",
"Aurelijus Skarbalius",
"Hjørring",
"Kolding",
"Christoffer Østergaard",
"Svenn Crone",
"Hobro",
"Michael Hansen (footballer)",
"2021–22 Danish 1st Division",
"Michael Schjønberg",
"Søren Henriksen (footballer)",
"FC Helsingør",
"Kolding IF",
"Rune Nautrup",
"Nike, Inc.",
"Diadora",
"Køge",
"Martin Thomsen (footballer, born 1982)",
"Oliver Drost",
"Pierre Dahlin Larsen",
"FC Roskilde",
"Copenhagen",
"JYSK Park",
"FC Fredericia",
"HB Køge",
"Uhlsport",
"Christopher Østberg",
"Helsingør",
"2020–21 Danish Superliga",
"Hvidovre",
"Ólafur Kristjánsson",
"Spar Nord",
"Danish Football Association",
"Rodolph Austin",
"Næstved BK",
"Jeppe Kjær (footballer, born 1985)",
"Troels Bech",
"Esbjerg fB",
"Lars Vind",
"Lyngby Boldklub",
"Hvidovre Stadium",
"Lasse Stensgaard",
"Grass",
"Edigeison Gomes",
"2020–21 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"2019–20 Danish 1st Division",
"2021–22 Danish Superliga",
"Viborg FF",
"Fredericia New Stadium",
"PFC Botev Plovdiv",
"Christian Tue Jensen",
"Fremad Amager",
"Silkeborg",
"SPAR Nord Arena",
"MASCOT Workwear",
"Sebastian Grønning",
"Mads Dittmer Hvilsom",
"Jacob Neestrup",
"Kent Nielsen",
"Adidas",
"2019–20 Danish Superliga",
"Jesper Christiansen (footballer, born 1978)",
"Azrudin Valentić",
"Capelli Sport",
"Morten Eskesen (footballer)",
"Silkeborg IF",
"Joakim Mattsson (footballer)",
"Kolding Stadion",
"Nicklas Helenius",
"Hobro IK",
"2021–22 Danish 2nd Division",
"Kristoffer Munksgaard",
"Fredericia",
"Jonas Dal",
"Magnus Mattsson",
"Thomas Røll",
"Sundby Idrætspark",
"Christian Ege Nielsen",
"Viborg, Denmark",
"Hummel International",
"2019–20 Danish 2nd Divisions",
"Nikolaj Hansen (footballer, born 1987)",
"Lars Friis"
] |
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