page_id
int64
12
2.54M
title
stringlengths
1
261
cleaned_text
stringlengths
0
753k
linked_titles
listlengths
0
29.9k
62,112,751
Nat Frazier
Nathaniel Frazier (April 18, 1935 – September 22, 2019) was an American basketball coach. He was head men's coach at Morgan State University, where in 1974 he led the program to the Division II national championship. Frazier played college basketball for Tuskegee University, where he was twice named to the All-Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference team. After several years coaching high school basketball in New York and New Jersey and reviving a master's degree from the City College of New York, Frazier launched his college career as an assistant for Delaware State. He then joined the Illinois staff as an assistant in 1967, at a time when few African-American coaches could be found on Big Ten coaching staffs. In 1971, Frazier was named head coach at Morgan State. Frazier left the Bears in 1977 to join Willis Reed's coaching staff on the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association (NBA) for the 1977–78 season. He then went on to serve as president and head coach of the Washington Metros of the short-lived Women's Professional Basketball League (WBL). Frazier returned to college coaching as head coach at Bowie State from 1980 to 1982. In 1984, he was hired as the head coach of Virginia Wave of the newly founded Women's American Basketball Association. In 1985, he returned as head coach of Morgan State (now a Division I program) and served in that role for four seasons. Frazier died on September 22, 2019, in Columbia, Maryland, at age 84.
[ "basketball", "Missouri State Bears basketball", "Women's Professional Basketball League", "Women's American Basketball Association (1984)", "New York Knicks", "1974 NCAA Division II basketball tournament", "Big Ten Conference", "Newspapers.com", "Richmond Times-Dispatch", "Tuskegee University", "Willis Reed", "Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference", "Beaufort, South Carolina", "Morgan State Bears men's basketball", "Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference", "1977–78 New York Knicks season", "The Baltimore Sun", "Baltimore Sun", "Morgan State University", "Block (basketball)", "NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament", "City College of New York", "Delaware State Hornets men's basketball", "Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball", "The Record (Bergen County, New Jersey)", "Bowie State Bulldogs men's basketball", "Tuskegee Golden Tigers men's basketball", "The Daily Advertiser (Lafayette, Louisiana)", "Marvin Webster", "Columbia, Maryland", "NCAA Division II", "Associated Press", "National Basketball Association", "MEAC men's basketball tournament" ]
62,112,755
Michele Campisi
Michele Campisi (born 22 April 1963 in Caltanissetta) is an Italian politician. He was a member of the centre-right party The People of Freedom and served as Mayor of Caltanissetta from June 2009 to June 2014.
[ "Italy", "Caltanissetta", "The People of Freedom", "Centre-right politics", "List of mayors of Caltanissetta", "Giovanni Ruvolo", "Ministry of the Interior (Italy)", "New Centre-Right", "2009 Italian local elections", "Salvatore Messana", "Sicily", "Mayor of Caltanissetta" ]
62,112,760
Template:Editnotices/Page/New York's 14th congressional district
[]
62,112,766
The Weeknd in Japan
The Weeknd in Japan is the first greatest hits album by Canadian singer-songwriter the Weeknd. It features singles from his first three studio albums: Kiss Land (2013), Beauty Behind the Madness (2015) and Starboy (2016), his 2015 feature, "Might Not", from Bellys eighth mixtape, Up for Days (2015) and the songs "Call Out My Name" and "Wasted Times" from his EP My Dear Melancholy (2018). It was released, digitally and physically, exclusively in Japan on November 21, 2018, by Universal Music Japan. The album's release occurred shortly before the start of the Weeknd Asia Tour (2018). ==Release and artwork== The Weeknd in Japan was released on November 21, 2018, by Universal Music Japan to commemorate Tesfaye's first performance in Japan, at the Makuhari Messe in December 2018, as a part of his 2018 tour, the Weeknd Asia Tour. It follows the release of his EP My Dear Melancholy, which was released earlier in the year, and includes various songs from the setlists of his aforementioned tour. The album's cover incorporates various aspects of the posters which were used to promote the Weeknd Asia Tour (2018). ==Track listing== Track listing adapted from iTunes. denotes a co-producer denotes a remix producer "Party Monster" features background vocals by Lana Del Rey "Wanderlust (Pharrell remix)" features background vocals by Pharrell Williams ==Charts== ==Release history==
[ "Might Not", "Wicked Games", "Oricon", "Music download", "Acquainted", "Conway Recording Studios", "Universal Music Japan", "Call Out My Name", "the Weeknd", "Starboy (song)", "Suffolk", "Lana Del Rey", "Peter Solley", "Roland Orzabal", "Cirkut (record producer)", "Kiss Land", "Downtown (company)", "Republic Records", "Makuhari Messe", "Wanderlust (The Weeknd song)", "The Weeknd", "Crown Towers (Melbourne)", "Illangelo", "Henson Recording Studios", "Starboy (album)", "Sabahattin Ali", "Skrillex", "The Hills (song)", "Ali Payami", "Often", "Miami Beach, Florida", "Frank Dukes", "Jungle City Studios", "Max Martin", "I Feel It Coming", "Compact disc", "In the Night (The Weeknd song)", "Secrets (The Weeknd song)", "Up for Days", "greatest hits album", "Maratone Studios", "Belly (rapper)", "Doc McKinney", "Jason Quenneville", "Universal Music Group", "Party Monster (song)", "Peter Svensson", "Wasted Times (The Weeknd song)", "Daft Punk", "After Hours (The Weeknd album)", "Wally Palmar", "Pharrell Williams", "the Weeknd Asia Tour", "My Dear Melancholy", "Pitchfork (website)", "House of Balloons", "Thomas Bangalter", "Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo", "Starrah", "iTunes Store", "Nicolas Jaar", "DannyBoyStyles", "Can't Feel My Face", "Savan Kotecha", "Beauty Behind the Madness", "XO (record label)" ]
62,112,773
Marie Herbert
Marie Herbert (born 1941) is an Irish-born adventurer and author who wrote biographically as well as novels based on her experiences. ==Biography== Born Marie McGaughey in Dublin, Ireland in 1941 to an army family, Herbert grew up in Sri Lanka, Egypt, South India and South Africa before training as an actress in the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London. Herbert worked in public relations for several years before she met her husband. She married the explorer Sir Wally Herbert on 24 December 1969. With him she lived for several years with the Thule Inuit in Greenland. There she raised her daughters Kari and Pascale and discovered the details of life in the village. The family also lived in Norway and Sweden. The couple's younger daughter died in an accident when she was fifteen. Marie Herbert became a writer, motivational speaker and therapist. Herbert was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society as well as being a member of the Society of Woman Geographers. She became Lady Herbert when her husband was knighted in 2000. Her daughter Kari founded the Polarworld publishing house and wrote The Explorer's Daughter.
[ "biography", "Society of Woman Geographers", "Wally Herbert", "Royal Central School of Speech and Drama", "Dublin", "Kari Herbert", "Royal Geographical Society" ]
62,112,781
Category:Suspected Wikipedia sockpuppets of Annsheetal
[]
62,112,789
Estonia at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics
Estonia competed at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics in Lausanne, Switzerland from 9 to 22 January 2020. ==Medalists== Medals awarded to participants of mixed-NOC teams are represented in italics. These medals are not counted towards the individual NOC medal tally. ==Competitors== The following is the list of number of competitors that participated at the Games per sport/discipline. * Markkus Alter and Triinu Hausenberg competed in nordic combined and ski jumping ==Alpine skiing== Boys ==Biathlon== Boys Girls Mixed ==Cross-country skiing== Boys Girls ==Curling== Estonia qualified a mixed team of four athletes. Mixed team Mixed doubles ==Figure skating== Two Estonian figure skaters achieved quota places for Estonia based on their results in the ISU Junior Grand Prix. Singles Mixed NOC team trophy ==Freestyle skiing== Girls ==Ice hockey== ===3x3=== ==Nordic combined== Boys Girls ==Ski jumping== Boys Girls
[ "Triinu Hausenberg", "Anders Veerpalu", "Simone Terraneo", "Utana Yoshida", "Lucy Neilson", "Figure skating at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Nordic combined at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Alpine skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Estonia at the 2020 Summer Olympics", "Nordic combined at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' normal hill individual/6 km", "Artyom Pronichkin", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' sprint", "Ērika Bitmete", "Riley Langille", "Štěpán Maleček", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Curling at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Curling at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Mixed team", "Lukas Høstmælingen", "2019–20 ISU Junior Grand Prix", "Patrik Dalen", "Lausanne", "Kelly Sildaru", "Sai Lake", "Evan Nauth", "Joris Valčiukas", "Karel Rammo", "Curling at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Mixed doubles", "Johanna Udras", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' sprint", "Erik Potšinok", "Milán Ivády", "Ski jumping at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' individual normal hill", "Momoha Tabata", "Estonia", "Alpine skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' slalom", "Tuudor Palm", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Mixed relay", "Estonian Olympic Committee", "Natali Vedro", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' cross-country cross", "Nicolas Elgas", "Daniel Assavolyuk", "Issa Otsuka", "Berfin Şengül", "Alina Butaeva", "International Skating Union", "Markkus Alter", "Hugo Galvez", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' individual", "Eliisabet Kool", "Marlon D'Acunto", "Freestyle skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' slopestyle", "Figure skating at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' singles", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Freestyle skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' 10 kilometres classic", "Yam Yau", "Ksenia Sinitsyna", "Maks Perčič", "Volodymyr Troshkin (ice hockey)", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' sprint", "Elvis Hsu", "Mixed-NOCs at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Romet Mäesalu", "Pablo González (ice hockey)", "2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Cater Hamill", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' individual", "Takumi Maeda", "Nathan Nicoud", "Hans Markus Danilas", "Sebastian Aarsund", "Biathlon at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Single mixed relay", "Hong Seung-woo", "Oliver Thestrup Hansen", "Katariina Klammer", "Luka Berulava", "Miia Heleene Utsal", "Luka Banek", "Andreas Koppa", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' cross-country cross", "Figure skating at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Team trophy", "Mikhail Vlasenko", "Ski jumping at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' individual normal hill", "Switzerland", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' 5 kilometre classical", "Ilya Korzun", "Olle Moberg", "Xenia Schwaller", "Marek Potšinok", "Levente Hegedűs", "Lisbeth Liiv", "Arlet Levandi", "Chen Chih-yuan (ice hockey)", "Eva-Lotta Kiibus", "Alessandro Segafredo", "Ice hockey at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Cross-country skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' sprint", "Markus Kägu", "Kaspar Päärson", "Jakub Trzebunia", "Figure skating at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' singles", "Lőrinc Tatár", "Ski jumping at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics", "Axel Ruski-Jones", "Rastislav Eliáš", "Henry Grünberg", "Konrad Kudeviita", "Markus Rene Epner", "Ziya Efe Güçlü", "Ice hockey at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' 3x3 mixed tournament", "Shingo Nishiyama", "Demi Heinsoo", "Alpine skiing at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Boys' giant slalom", "Artur Seniut", "Nordic combined at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' normal hill individual/4 km", "Matyáš Šapovaliv", "Caleb Chapman (ice hockey)" ]
62,112,795
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/myultimatereviews.com
== Links == myultimatereviews.com resolves to [//96.44.130.194 96.44.130.194] Link is not on the blacklist. Link is not on the domainredlist. Link is not on the Monitorlist. None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist. Link is not on the whitelist. Link is not on the monitor list. == Users == == Additions == Displayed all 5 additions.
[ "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,112,796
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/myultimatereviews.com
== Links == myultimatereviews.com resolves to [//96.44.130.194 96.44.130.194] 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 5 additions out of 5 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/myultimatereviews.com == Entry == Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist: \bmyultimatereviews\.com\b   # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/myultimatereviews.com]] == Discussion == See COIBot report for more details. New data reported. --COIBot (talk) 16:19, 20 October 2019 (UTC) No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. . --COIBot (talk) 00:26, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
[ "</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/myultimatereviews.com", "MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log", "en:User:COIBot" ]
62,112,797
Haddush Addi
Haddush Addi may refer to: The Haddush Addi massacre near Wukro Maray in Tigray in 2021 The village of Haddush Addi in Seret (Dogu'a Tembien) in Tigray
[ "Haddush Addi massacre", "Seret (Dogu'a Tembien)" ]
62,112,798
Matias Malmberg
Matias Gunnar Malmberg (born 31 August 2000) is a Danish road and track cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team . He competed at the 2019 UEC European Track Championships. ==Major results== ===Track=== 2016 1st Team pursuit, National Track Championships 2018 3rd Madison (with Oliver Frederiksen), UCI Junior Track World Championships 3rd Omnium, National Track Championships 2019 National Track Championships 1st Madison (with Lasse Norman Hansen) 2nd Omnium 2020 1st Omnium, National Track Championships 2021 UEC European Track Championships 1st Team pursuit 3rd Omnium 1st Omnium, UEC European Under-23 Track Championships 1st Madison (with Rasmus Pedersen), National Track Championships ===Road=== 2022 1st Time trial, National Under-23 Road Championships 1st Stage 1 (TTT) Kreiz Breizh Elites 7th Overall Flanders Tomorrow Tour 1st Stage 3a (ITT) 2023 2nd Overall Tour of Estonia 8th Fyen Rundt 10th GP Slovenian Istria
[ "Team time trial", "2019 UEC European Track Championships", "UEC European Track Championships", "Tour of Estonia", "Lasse Norman Hansen", "2018 UCI Junior Track Cycling World Championships", "track cycling", "road bicycle racing", "Rasmus Pedersen", "Fyen Rundt", "GP Slovenian Istria", "Frederiksberg", "Flanders Tomorrow Tour", "2021 UEC European Track Championships – Men's team pursuit", "Union Cycliste Internationale", "Individual time trial", "UCI Continental", "Kreiz Breizh Elites", "2021 UEC European Track Championships", "2021 UEC European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)", "Danish National Time Trial Championships" ]
62,112,832
Category:Redirects from .nz domain names
[]
62,112,835
Category:Redirects from .ch domain names
[]
62,112,843
Category:Iraqi science writers
[ "science writer", "Iraq" ]
62,112,846
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Scholars Online
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) ===:Scholars Online=== – (View AfDView log Stats) () Only references are to its own publications. Not very notable. Rathfelder (talk) 16:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Schools-related deletion discussions. Rathfelder (talk) 16:29, 20 October 2019 (UTC) Delete. No only 'not very notable', but spam to boot. Fails WP:ORG. Kudpung กุดผึ้ง (talk) 06:26, 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:ORG", "Scholars Online" ]
62,112,850
Category:Articles containing Narragansett-language text
[]
62,112,854
Elena Anagnostopoulou
Elena Anagnostopoulou (born 27 January 1967 in Athens, Greece) is a Greek theoretical linguist and syntactician. She is currently Professor of Theoretical Linguistics at the University of Crete. ==Education and career== Anagnostopoulou received her PhD in 1994 from the University of Salzburg. Following this, she held a postdoctoral position at the MIT from 1997 to 1998, before taking up a position as assistant professor at the University of Crete in 1998, where she remains to this day. She was promoted to Associate Professor in 2005 and to full professor in 2009. In 2007 she returned to MIT as a visiting associate professor. Anagnostopoulou works within the framework of generative grammar, and is known for her work in syntax, morphology, and historical linguistics. Within these fields she has focused on the phenomena of case, agreement, person, argument structure, and clitics. ==Honours and awards== Anagnostopoulou was awarded a Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in 2013. In 2019 she was elected a member of the Academia Europaea. ==Selected works== Alexiadou, Artemis & Elena Anagnostopoulou: 'Parameterizing AGR: Word order, V-movement and EPP-checking.' Natural Language & Linguistic Theory 16 (1998), 491–539. Iatridou, Sabine, Elena Anagnostopoulou & Roumyana Izvorski: 'Observations about the form and meaning of the perfect.' In Michael Kenstowicz (ed.), Ken Hale: A Life in Language, 189–238. Cambridge, MA, 2001: MIT Press. Alexiadou, Artemis, Elena Anagnostopoulou, Sjef Barbiers & Hans-Martin Gärtner (eds.): Dimensions of Movement: from Features to Remnants. Amsterdam, 2002: John Benjamins. Anagnostopoulou, Elena: The syntax of ditransitives: Evidence from clitics. Berlin, 2003: Mouton de Gruyter. Alexiadou, Artemis, Elena Anagnostopoulou & Martin Everaert (eds.): The Unaccusativity Puzzle. Oxford, 2004: Oxford University Press. Anagnostopoulou, Elena: 'Strong and weak person restrictions: A feature checking analysis.' In Lorie Heggie & Francisco Ordóñez (eds.), Clitic and affix combinations: Theoretical perspectives, 199–235. Amsterdam, 2005: John Benjamins. Alexiadou, Artemis, Elena Anagnostopoulou & Florian Schäfer: External Arguments in Transitivity Alternations. Oxford, 2015: Oxford University Press.
[ "Athens", "Agreement (linguistics)", "syntax", "University of Salzburg", "Alexander von Humboldt Foundation", "Syntax", "Grammatical case", "Doctor of Philosophy", "Grammatical person", "historical linguistics", "Argument (linguistics)", "Artemis Alexiadou", "University of Crete", "Theoretical linguistics", "Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel", "Sabine Iatridou", "Massachusetts Institute of Technology", "Academia Europaea", "clitic", "generative grammar", "Morphology (linguistics)" ]
62,112,855
Noobees
{{Infobox television | image = Noobees poster.jpg | caption = | genre = Teen drama | creator = | developer = | writer = | screenplay = | story = | director = William Barragán The series premiered on Nickelodeon worldwide, except for United States, on 17 September 2018, The series had been renewed for a second season, released in March 2020. The series stars Michelle Olvera, best known for her character in the Telemundo series La Doña. == Synopsis == NooBees revolves around the trajectory of a group of teenagers who have the opportunity to fulfill their biggest dream: participate in the Esports Championship. For this they create "NooBees", an esports team that will compete for the title of Professional Video Games League. == Series overview == == Cast == === Introduced in season 1 === Michelle Olvera as Silvia Rojas (seasons 1-2) Andrés de la Mora as David Ortuz (seasons 1-2) María Jose Vargas as Ruth Olivera "Ruthilika" (seasons 1-2) Lion Bagnis as Matt Montero "Míster M" Ilenia Antonini as Tania Botero Kevin Bury as Pablo Botero Brandon Figueredo as Erick Rojas (seasons 1-2) Clara Tiezzi as Laura Calles (seasons 1-2) Karol Saavedra as Roberta Barrios (season 1; guest season 2) Megumi Hasebe as Liliana "Lili" (seasons 1-2) Andy Munera as Nicholas "Niko" (seasons 1-2) Felipe Arcila as Kevin Orlando Núñez Gómez "Kong" (seasons 1-2) Camila Pabón as Norah (seasons 1-2) Luis Fernando Salas as Héctor Rojas (seasons 1-2) Óscar Rodo as Roberto Barrios (season 1; guest season 2) Nara Gutiérrez as Marina Gómez (seasons 1-2) Karen Martínez as Salma de Rojas (seasons 1-2) Lugo Duarte as Mateo Montero (seasons 1-2) Marisol Correa as Emma de Montero Julian Beltran as Game Over (Voice) (seasons 1-2) Daniela Velez as Helen Santiago (season 1; guest season 2) Sergio Herrera as Rufino (seasons 1-2) Fernando Lara as Rector Juliana Velásquez as Soledade (season 1; guest season 2) Gonzalo Vivanco as Zigorisko === Introduced in season 2 === Julián Cerati as Rocco Karlis Romero as Athina Luis Giraldo as Melvin Mafe Marín as Jackie Alejandro Hidalgo as Trueno Ginna Parra as Fernanda "Estrella" Monica Uribe as Doris Tormenta Pablo Rodríguez as Arturo Isabella Dominguez as Nina Daniela Perez "La Pereztroica" as Olimpia Juanita Molina as Kosnika Carlos Baéz as Kral Michelle Orozco as Oritzó Estive Urrutia as Anoiram Stiven Espitia as Adoam Nicolas Vargas as Sasac Jeisen Pacheco as Ferbat Camila Mora as Duna Daniel Moreno as Kevelek Alejandro Gutierrez as Enzo Nataly Arbelaez as Betsy Laila Camacho as Zilua Freddy Beltrán as Jurado Ian Valencia as Game Over (Avatar Form)
[ "teen drama", "esports", "Viacom International", "Bogota, Colombia", "MediaPro Studios", "La Doña (2016 TV series)", "Teen drama", "Clara Tiezzi", "Single-camera setup", "Nickelodeon (Latin American TV channel)", "Esports Championship Series", "RCN Televisión", "Karen Martínez", "Michelle Olvera", "teenagers", "Telemundo" ]
62,112,864
File:Al Mar Knives logo.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
62,112,877
Dependent random choice
In mathematics, dependent random choice is a probabilistic technique that shows how to find a large set of vertices in a dense graph such that every small subset of vertices has many common neighbors. It is a useful tool to embed a graph into another graph with many edges. Thus it has its application in extremal graph theory, additive combinatorics and Ramsey theory. ==Statement of theorem== Let u,n,r,m,t \in \mathbb{N}, \alpha>0 and suppose: n\alpha^t - {n \choose r} \left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t \geq u.Every graph on n vertices with at least \frac{\alpha n^2}{2} edges contains a subset U of vertices with |U|\geq u such that for all S\subset U with |S| = r, S has at least m common neighbors. ==Proof== The basic idea is to choose the set of vertices randomly. However, instead of choosing each vertex uniformly at random, the procedure randomly chooses a list of t vertices first and then chooses common neighbors as the set of vertices. The hope is that in this way, the chosen set would be more likely to have more common neighbors. Formally, let T be a list of t vertices chosen uniformly at random from V(G) with replacement (allowing repetition). Let A be the common neighborhood of T. The expected value of |A| is\begin{align} \mathbb{E}|A| &= \sum_{v\in V}\mathbb{P}(v\in A)= \sum_{v\in V}\mathbb{P}(T\subseteq N(v))= \sum_{v\in V}\left(\frac{d(v)}{n}\right)^t\\ &\geq n\left(\frac{1}{n}\sum_{v\in V}\frac{d(v)}{n}\right)^t \quad\text{(convexity)}\\ &\geq n\alpha^t. \end{align}For every r-element subset S of V, A contains S if and only if T is contained in the common neighborhood of S, which occurs with probability \left(\frac{\#\text{common neighbors of }S}{n}\right)^t. An S is bad if it has less than m common neighbors. Then for each fixed r-element subset S of V, it is contained in A with probability less than (m/n)^t. Therefore by linearity of expectation,\mathbb{E}[\#\text{bad }r\text{-element subset of }A]<\binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t. To eliminate bad subsets, we exclude one element in each bad subset. The number of remaining elements is at least |A|-(\#\text{bad }r\text{-element subset of }A), whose expected value is at least n\alpha^t-\binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t\geq u. Consequently, there exists a T such that there are at least u elements in A remaining after getting rid of all bad r-element subsets. The set U of the remaining u elements expresses the desired properties. ==Applications== ===Turán numbers of a bipartite graph=== Dependent random choice can help find the Turán number. Using appropriate parameters, if H = A\cup B is a bipartite graph in which all vertices in B have degree at most r, then the extremal number \text{ex}(n, H)\leq c n^{2-1/r} where c = c(H) only depends on H. Formally, with a=|A|, b=|B|, let c be a sufficiently large constant such that (2c)^r - (a+b)^r \geq a. If \alpha = 2cn^{-1/r}, m = a+b, t = r, u = a then n\alpha^t - \binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t = (2c)^r - \binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{a+b}{n}\right)^r\geq (2c)^r - (a+b)^r\geq a=u,and so the assumption of dependent random choice holds. Hence, for each graph G with at least cn^{2-1/r} edges, there exists a vertex subset U of size a satisfying that every r-subset of U has at least a+b common neighbors. By embedding H into G by embedding A into U arbitrarily and then embedding the vertices in B one by one, then for each vertex v in B, it has at most r neighbors in A, which shows that their images in U have at least a+b common neighbors. Thus v can be embedded into one of the common neighbors while avoiding collisions. This can be generalized to degenerate graphs using a variation of dependent random choice. ===Embedding a 1-subdivision of a complete graph=== DRC can be applied directly to show that if G is a graph on n vertices and \epsilon n^2 edges, then G contains a 1-subdivision of a complete graph with \epsilon^{3/2}n^{1/2} vertices. This can be shown in a similar way to the above proof of the bound on Turán number of a bipartite graph. Indeed, if we set \alpha = 2\epsilon, m = a^2, t=\frac{\log n}{2\log 1/\epsilon}, u=a, we have (since 2\epsilon = \alpha \leq 1)n\alpha^t - \binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t \geq (2\epsilon)^tn - \binom{n}{2}\epsilon^{3t}\geq n^{1/2}\geq a=u,and so the DRC assumption holds. Since a 1-subdivision of the complete graph on a vertices is a bipartite graph with parts of size a and b = \binom{a}{2} where every vertex in the second part has degree two, the embedding argument in the proof of the bound on Turán number of a bipartite graph produces the desired result. == Variation == A stronger version finds two subsets of vertices U_1, U_2 in a dense graph G so that every small subset of vertices in U_i has a lot of common neighbors in U_{3-i}. Formally, let u,n,r,m,t,q be some positive integers with q>r, and let \alpha>0 be some real number. Suppose that the following constraints hold: \begin{align} n\alpha^t-\binom{n}{q}\left(\frac{m}{n}\right)^t & \geq u\\ \binom{n}{r}\left(\frac{m}{u}\right)^{q-r} & Then every graph G on n vertices with at least \alpha n^2/2 edges contains two subsets U_1, U_2 of vertices so that any r vertices in U_i have at least m common neighbors in U_{3-i}. ===Extremal number of a degenerate bipartite graph=== Using this stronger statement, one can upper bound the extremal number of r-degenerate bipartite graphs: for each r-degenerate bipartite graph H with at most N^{1-1.8/s} vertices, the extremal number \text{ex}(N, H) is at most N^{2-1/(s^3r)}. ===Ramsey number of a degenerate bipartite graph=== This statement can be also applied to obtain an upper bound of the Ramsey number of a degenerate bipartite graphs. If r is a fixed integer, then for every bipartite r-degenerate bipartite graph G on n vertices, the Ramsey number r(G) is of the order n^{1+o(1)}.
[ "Ramsey's theorem", "Journal of Combinatorial Theory", "extremal graph theory", "Extremal graph theory", "additive combinatorics", "Graph theory", "Journal of Graph Theory", "bipartite graph", "Degeneracy (graph theory)", "Homeomorphism (graph theory)", "Ramsey theory", "probabilistic", "Vertex (geometry)", "Turán number" ]
62,112,882
Category:Maltese cricketers
[]
62,112,889
Sara Shakeel
Sara Shakeel is a Pakistani contemporary artist based in London. She is known for using glass crystals to create both digital and physical collages on photography and three-dimensional objects. == Artistic career == Shakeel first taught herself Photoshop and began using her artwork as an outlet for her emotions. Shakeel began posting her art on the social media platform Instagram where she gained a following of over one million followers. In the fall of 2019, Shakeel released a capsule clothing collection in collaboration with the London-based retailer Browns as well as displaying her piece The Great Supper in their store. === Glitter Stretch Marks === Shakeel's first body of work was posted on Instagram under the hashtag #glitterstretchmarks. Shakeel superimposed gold glitter, crystals, and galaxies onto images of stretch marks. By covering these stretch marks in glitter and crystals, Shakeel's goal was to promote body positivity and empowerment by taking something often seen as an imperfection and turning it into art. In 2019, Shakeel collaborated with Reebok to create an ad for their body image awareness campaign in which she covered the muscles of athlete Jamie Green with Swarovski crystals. === Work with Chance the Rapper === Shakeel created the cover art for Chance the Rapper's album The Big Day. For this piece, Shakeel created a physical CD from glass and resin, then covered it in crystals. The object was then photographed and used for the cover art and promotion. Along with the album art, Chance the Rapper commissioned Shakeel to create work for a pop-up exhibition and retail experience coinciding with his record release titled "The Big Store". === The Great Supper === In 2019, Shakeel created the installation sculpture The Great Supper for an exhibition at NOW Gallery in London. Her inspiration was Leonardo da Vinci's painting The Last Supper and her own memories of eating around the dinner table with her family. She references the importance of the Urdu word gupshup, loosely translated to mean socially-bonding and important conversation. Shakeel received the annual Young Artist's Commission from the NOW Gallery for this piece in 2019. === Response to Coronavirus === Shakeel created a series of images related to hand washing in response to the 2019–20 outbreak of COVID-19. In these images, the water coming from the spout is collaged with crystals and glitter in an attempt to bring a positive impact on people's lives during a difficult time. Shakeel's glittery hand washing images have been used in several blogs and news outlets, including Elle Canada, detailing the best practices for hand washing to prevent the spread of the virus. She also created a series of images featuring health care workers surrounded by glitter and crystals. The original images were sent in via submission to Shakeel.
[ "collage", "Elle (magazine)", "The Big Day (album)", "body image", "Coronavirus disease 2019", "Urdu", "The Last Supper (Leonardo)", "Chance the Rapper", "London", "Reebok", "Leonardo da Vinci" ]
62,112,893
Farah Tufail
Farah Tufail is a Pakistani television actress and RJ. She started her career during 2000s. Tufail received Hum Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Tehreem in telefilm Tehreem. Her television appearance includes a series of notable projects like Hum Tum Aur Woh (2008), Dil Ki Batain (2008), Thakan (2012), Teri Raah Main Rul Gai (2012), Kuch Pyar Ka Pagalpan (2014), Kaneez (2015), Baaghi (2017), Pinjra (2017), Ghughi (2018), Aakhri Station (2018), Hoor Pari (2019). == Television ==
[ "ARY Digital", "Hum TV", "Hoor Pari", "Hum Award for Best Actress", "Dushman e Jaan", "Green Entertainment", "Aakhri Station (miniseries)", "Dastaan (2010 TV series)", "Punjab, Pakistan", "Kuch Pyar Ka Pagalpan", "Ghughi", "Baaghi (TV series)", "Teri Raah Main Rul Gai", "Thakan", "Mujhay Jeenay Do", "Kahan Ho Tum (TV series)", "PTV Home", "Ghundi", "Sannata", "Hum Sitaray", "Pinjra (2017 TV series)", "Urdu 1", "Hum Award", "A-Plus TV", "Lahore" ]
62,112,895
Category:North American diaspora in Mexico
[]
62,112,903
Category:Scottish people of Maltese descent
People from Malta who emigrated to Scotland, or their descendants.
[ "Scotland" ]
62,112,907
Ivan Maximkin
Ivan Maximkin (born March 5, 1988) is a Russian former professional ice hockey defenceman. Maximkin played in the Russian Superleague and Kontinental Hockey League for Lada Togliatti and Dynamo Moscow. He also had spells in the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship for Kazakhmys Satpaev, Saryarka Karagandy, Kazzinc-Torpedo and HC Astana. Maximkim was selected 28th overall in the 2005 CHL Import Draft by the Ontario Hockey League's Erie Otters, though he ultimately never played in the league and remained in Russia.
[ "defenceman", "Defenceman", "Saryarka Karagandy", "Erie Otters", "Balakovo", "Russian Superleague", "Ontario Hockey League", "Kazakhmys Satpaev", "Kazakhstan Hockey Championship", "HC Dynamo Moscow", "HC Lada Togliatti", "ice hockey", "Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic", "Kazzinc-Torpedo", "CHL Import Draft", "HC Astana", "Kontinental Hockey League" ]
62,112,910
Category:Distance education institutions based in Mexico
[]
62,112,917
Carleton S. Coon Jr.
Carleton Stevens Coon Jr. (1927December 3, 2018) was a career foreign service officer who served as the American Ambassador to Nepal. At the time, his wife Jean (née Abell) served as Ambassador in Dacca, Bangladesh. He died on December 3, 2018, in Warrenton, Virginia. ==Career== A Harvard graduate (majoring in geography), Coon joined the Foreign Service upon graduating in 1949 and served in West Germany, Syria, India, Iran, Nepal and Morocco.
[ "Harvard", "foreign service", "Jane Abell Coon", "Warrenton, Virginia", "Carleton S. Coon" ]
62,112,918
File:Bonez MC & RAF Camora - 500 PS.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[ "RAF Camora", "Capitol Records", "500 PS", "Bonez MC", "Universal Music Group" ]
62,112,920
Sára Kaňkovská
Sára Kaňkovská (born 22 June 1998) is a Czech professional racing cyclist. She rode in the women's 500 m time trial event at the 2019 UEC European Track Championships.
[ "track cycling", "UEC European Track Championships", "2019 UEC European Track Championships", "2019 UEC European Track Championships – Women's 500 m time trial", "2020 UEC European Track Championships", "2020 UEC European Track Championships – Women's keirin", "bicycle racing" ]
62,112,923
Big Brother (Greek TV series) season 1
Big Brother Greece 1, was the first season of the Greek reality television series Big Brother. The show followed twelve contestants, known as housemates, who were isolated from the outside world for an extended period of time in a custom built House. Each week, one or more of the housemates were evicted by a public vote. The last remaining housemate, Giorgos Triantafyllidis, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of 50,000,000 GRD. The season lasted 113 days and was presented by Andreas Mikroutsikos. It launched on ANT1 on September 10, 2001 and ended on December 31, 2001. This season is considered the most successful season out of the three to follow on ANT1, with massive viewership. Its finale on New Year's Eve attracted more than 80% of the television share. Important personalities from the season include runner-up Prodromos Kathiniotis who later went on to release a studio album and also dab in TV hosting. ==Housemates== == Nominations Table ==
[ "ANT1", "reality television", "Andreas Mikroutsikos", "Big Brother (Greek TV series)", "Prodromos Kathiniotis" ]
62,112,928
Category:2001 Greek television seasons
[]
62,112,930
Copperton Historic District
{{Infobox NRHP | name = Copperton Historic District | nrhp_type = | image = | caption = | location= Roughly bounded by State Highway, Apex Road, Hillcrest Street, and Dinkyville Way inCopperton, UtahUnited States | coordinates= | locmapin = Utah#USA | built = 1926-41 | builder = Scott & Welch; et al. | architecture = Bungalow/craftsman, Tudor Revival, Spanish Colonial Revival | added = August 14, 1986 | area = | refnum = 86002642 ==Description== The district includes 237 contributing buildings and two contributing structures, on . It is roughly bounded by State Highway (Utah State Route 209, formerly Utah State Route 48), Apex Road (formerly 5th East), Hillcrest Street, and Dinkyville Way (formerly 2nd West). The district was listed on the NRHP on August 14, 1986
[ "Bingham Canyon", "contributing structures", "historic district (United States)", "National Park Service", "Copperton Community Methodist Church", "contributing buildings", "Utah", "Utah State Route 209", "Utah Copper Company", "National Register of Historic Places", "Copperton, Utah", "National Register of Historic Places listings in Salt Lake County, Utah", "Utah State Route 48" ]
62,112,934
Khaled Al-Khathlan
Khaled Al-Khathlan (, born 3 August 1996) is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Al-Batin. ==Career== Al-Khathlan began his career at the youth team of Al-Hilal. He joined the U23 team of Al-Nassr in 2015. On 14 August 2017, Al-Khathlan signed for Al-Qaisumah. On 9 July 2019, Al-Khathlan signed a three-year contract with Abha. On 31 January 2020, Al-Khathlan joined Al-Raed and signed a 3-year contract with the club. On 29 July 2023, Al-Khathlan joined Al-Batin. ==Career statistics== ===Club===
[ "Al-Nassr FC", "2018–19 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League", "Saudi Arabia", "Abha Club", "Association football", "Defender (association football)", "2019–20 Abha Club season", "Prince Mohammad bin Salman League", "Saudi Professional League", "Al-Raed FC", "Al-Qaisumah FC", "Al-Hilal FC", "2017–18 Prince Mohammad bin Salman League", "Al-Batin FC" ]
62,112,935
Maybach VL II
The Maybach VL II was a type of internal combustion engine built by the German company Maybach in the late 1920s and 1930s. It was an uprated development of the successful Maybach VL I, and like the VL I, was a 60° V-12 engine. ==History== Five of them powered the German airship Graf Zeppelin, housed in separate nacelles. The engines developed and were of capacity. They could burn either Blau gas or petrol. The American USS Akron used eight of them, mounted internally, as did its sister ship Macon. The engines were reversible, meaning different cams could be engaged allowing the engine crankshaft to run in either direction, enabling reverse thrust. Lürssen built the fast yacht Oheka II in 1927; powered by three VL IIs, it was the fastest vessel of its type and became the basis of Germany's E-boats of World War II. ==Applications== LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin USS Akron (ZRS-4) USS Macon (ZRS-5) Oheka II ==Specifications==
[ "LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin", "gasoline", "Oheka II", "Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Aircraft", "E-boat", "List of aircraft engines", "USS Akron", "WP:Air/PC", "Maybach VL I", "USS Macon (ZRS-5)", "internal combustion engine", "V-12 engine", "Maybach", "nacelle", "Lürssen", "Blau gas" ]
62,112,937
Kateřina Kohoutková
Kateřina Kohoutková (born 23 October 1998) is a Czech professional racing cyclist. She rode in the women's madison event at the 2019 UEC European Track Championships.
[ "2019 UEC European Track Championships – Women's madison", "2019 UEC European Track Championships", "bicycle racing" ]
62,112,938
Category:American companies disestablished in 1974
Notable companies of the United States .
[ "company", "United States" ]
62,112,939
Wladimiro Boccali
{{Infobox officeholder |name = Wladimiro Boccali |image = Wladimiro Boccali by The Polish.jpg |caption = |office = Mayor of Perugia |term_start = 8 June 2009 |term_end = 11 June 2014 |predecessor = Renato Locchi |successor = Andrea Romizi |birth_name = |birth_date = |birth_place = Perugia, Umbria, Italy
[ "Italian Communist Party", "Italy", "Umbria", "Democratic Party of the Left", "Democratic Party (Italy)", "Renato Locchi", "Perugia", "Ministry of the Interior (Italy)", "Democrats of the Left", "Andrea Romizi", "2014 Italian local elections", "List of mayors of Perugia", "Centre-right politics" ]
62,112,945
Category:Companies disestablished in 1974 by country
[]
62,112,950
The Green Ribbon (novel)
The Green Ribbon is a 1929 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Like a number of Wallace's novels it is set against the backdrop of the horseracing world. ==Film adaptation== In 1961 it was turned into the film Never Back Losers, directed by Robert Tronson as part of a long-running series of Wallace films made at Merton Park Studios.
[ "United Kingdom", "Merton Park Studios", "Robert Tronson", "crime novel", "The Crime Club", "Edgar Wallace", "horseracing", "Hutchinson (publisher)", "Never Back Losers" ]
62,112,951
Eduard Daniel Leopold van Ingen
Eduard Daniel Leopold baron van Ingen (born 22 June 1799 – 16 March 1833) was a Dutch colonial administrator on the Gold Coast. He was interim commander from 1832 until his death on 16 March 1833. == Biography == Eduard van Ingen was born in Zutphen to baron Antoni Lucas van Ingen, a captain in the Dutch army, and Elisabeth Louise Heckers. Eduard van Ingen was appointed assistant on the Dutch Gold Coast by royal decree of 8 July 1828. He was promoted to resident on 1 July 1829. Van Ingen became acting commander of the Dutch Gold Coast after the previous acting commander Jan Tieleman Jacobus Cremer died in office on 1 July 1832. Van Ingen took office on 2 July 1832. After Kwadwo Akyampon died on 18 September 1832, Van Ingen sent the military commandant Reinier Klaassen to Kumasi to inform the Asantehene about his death. Van Ingen himself also died in office on 16 March 1833, reportedly because of alcoholism. He was buried in the Dutch Cemetery of Elmina.
[ "Dutch people", "baron", "List of colonial governors of the Dutch Gold Coast", "Martinus Swarte", "Zutphen", "Elmina", "Dutch Gold Coast", "Kwadwo Akyampon", "Asantehene", "Jan Tieleman Jacobus Cremer", "Kumasi", "William I of the Netherlands", "Dutch Cemetery, Elmina", "Netherlands" ]
62,112,954
File:Noobees poster.jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[ "Nickelodeon (Latin America)" ]
62,112,960
Wiktoria Pikulik
Wiktoria Pikulik (born 15 June 1998) is a Polish professional racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Women's WorldTeam . In 2019, she became a three-time national track cycling champion, winning the under-23 omnium, team pursuit and Madison events. She also rode in the women's madison event at the 2019 UEC European Track Championships, with her sister Daria, securing qualification points for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
[ "Madison (cycling)", "team pursuit", "2019 UEC European Track Championships", "2020 Summer Olympics", "UCI Women's Team", "MAT Atom Deweloper Wrocław", "Darłowo", "Daria Pikulik", "2019 UEC European Track Championships – Women's madison", "omnium", "bicycle racing" ]
62,112,962
Cavenham Heath
Cavenham Heath is a National Nature Reserve, near Cavenham, Suffolk. It is both a Regionally Important Geological/Geomorphological Sites (RIGS) and a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
[ "Cavenham", "Site of Special Scientific Interest", "Regionally Important Geological Site", "English Nature", "Suffolk", "National nature reserves in Suffolk" ]
62,112,963
Pseudorestias
Pseudorestias is a monospecific genus in the family Cyprinodontidae, the pupfishes. The only species in the genus is Pseudorestias lirimensis which was described in 2017. from a type locality given as "Charvinto Creek near to the thermal pond Baños San Andrés about 6 km E of Lirima village, Chancacolla River, Tarapacá Region, northern Chile". It was also found in the Chancacolla River.
[ "Natalia Lan", "Chancacolla River", "Gloria Arratia", "Cyprinodontidae", "Claudio Quezada-Romegialli", "genus", "Irma Vila (zoologist)", "Family (biology)", "Claudia Jimena Guerrero", "Species description", "monospecific", "pupfish", "Type locality (biology)" ]
62,112,964
Jellyfish bloom
Jellyfish blooms are substantial growths in population of species under the phyla Cnidaria (including several types of jellyfish) and Ctenophora (comb jellies). Blooms may take place naturally as a result of ocean and wind patterns, ecosystem shifts, and jellyfish behaviors though their occurrence is thought to have increased during the last several decades in near-shore regions and shallow seas around the world. Changes in ocean conditions including eutrophication, hypoxia, rising ocean temperatures, are thought to be the main causes of increasing jellyfish blooms. Little is known regarding how future environmental conditions will affect jellyfish blooms, though this is a growing field of research. Jellyfish blooms significantly impact ecological community composition and structure by reducing available prey for higher predators. clogging fishing nets and power plant pipes, and overwhelming popular beach destinations leading to closures.|alt=|left]] The frequency of jellyfish blooms is currently being investigated to determine if global trends are increasing as climate patterns shift. Eutrophication, Eutrophication, for example, provides an excess of nutrients, which leads to abnormally large algal blooms that support rapid jellyfish population growth. which may lead to hypoxia. Jellyfish can tolerate hypoxic conditions where more sensitive species cannot. Spring and summer months typically have more jellyfish blooms because the warmer water temperatures cause jellyfish to reach sexual maturity more quickly. Coastal development has also created physical changes to coastal ecosystems that favor rapid jellyfish growth. Fish eggs and small larvae make ideal prey for carnivorous jellyfish and other predators, as they have low escape ability and are larger in size compared to other zooplankton. Some studies have shown jellyfish can outcompete other predators in a bloom. For example, in the 1999 Chrysaora melanaster bloom in the Bering Sea, Brodeur et al. found that the bloom had consumed roughly 32% of the total zooplankton stock, which was nearly 5% of the annual secondary production of the region. In non-bloom conditions, zooplankton consumption by jellyfish was <1% of the annual zooplankton stock. Seasonal blooms of sea nettles were partially dependent on oyster populations as oysters provided the most extensive hard substrate in Chesapeake Bay, which was critical for the polyp stage of sea nettle development. As sea nettle population decreased the top-down control on ctenophores (Mnemiopsis leidyi) was essentially removed, allowing ctenophores to increase resulting increased ctenophore predation on oyster larvae and icthyoplankton. This ultimately exacerbated the decline of both sea nettle and oyster populations. Jellyfish produce mucus rich in organic C and N that is consumed by microbial communities. The ratio of C:N in the mucus depends on species and symbiotic relationships. Mucus produced by zooxanthellate jellyfish is lower in organic N than non-zooxanthellate species. The death, sinking, and decomposition of jellyfish is rapid and leads to a mass release of dissolved and particulate, organic and inorganic matter in the water column or seafloor creating a significant source of food for the microbial community. In both scenarios the organic matter from the jellyfish is consumed by the bacterial community who simultaneously reduce available oxygen, at times contributing to hypoxia. In some cases, the jelly-falls are too large for consumption and organic matter accumulates on the seafloor creating a physical barrier for diffusion mechanisms, reducing oxygen transport into sediments. == Impacts on humans == === Fishing === Large jellyfish blooms can disrupt fisheries operations by decreasing catch quality and overwhelming fishing gear. In overexploited fisheries, this can prevent recovery of target fish species and result in the creation of an alternative stable state. Blooms generally coincide with a decrease in fish catch, which results in decreased profits and fewer jobs. Jellyfish fisheries could be a strategy for controlling blooms, yet these fisheries still remain small scale and have not yet expanded to markets outside of Asia.   Negative effects of jellyfish blooms are also felt in the aquaculture industry. Jellyfish occasionally find their way into sea pens in industrial fish farms and have been recorded to injure and kill fish. In 2011, a fish farm in Spain reported 50,000 € in profits lost due to fish mortality following an influx of jellyfish into their pens. === Industry === Power plants are often built on coasts and draw seawater for industrial cooling water. Jellyfish can clog the water intakes of power plants, which can decrease energy production or cause shutdowns. Attitudes differed between hypothetical and actual blooms. People were more likely to say they would avoid the beach before an outbreak, yet during outbreaks respondents were about twice as likely to say they would enter the water regardless. Much research in the future will also investigate the impacts of short and long term environmental and climatic pressures on jellyfish abundances. === Data collection challenges === Challenges in discerning jellyfish bloom trends partially arise from the lack of long-term data sets. This lack of data also inhibits researchers' abilities to distinguish between jellyfish bloom oscillations caused by natural versus anthropogenic impacts. One review demonstrated that there were increasing trends of jellyfish abundances in 28 out of the 45 Large Marine Ecosystems globally. However, the review notes the limitations of their analyses, given substantial time series data is unavailable. Other studies refute the idea that global jellyfish populations are increasing at all; they state that these variations are simply part of the larger-scale climatic and ecosystem processes. The lack of data has been interpreted as a lack of blooms. An additional difficulty with studying jellyfish bloom dynamics is understanding how populations change in both the polyp and medusae life stages of a jellyfish. Medusae are much easier for researchers to track and observe due to their size and presence in the water. However, the ecology of the polyp life stage is not well understood in most jellyfish species. Many polyps are difficult to sample due to their fragility. There have been calls for future research to focus on the ecology of both the medusae and the polyp life stages to better understand bloom dynamics throughout the organisms' entire lifespans.
[ "sea turtle", "carbon", "ammonium", "Mucus", "weathering", "Estuary", "Salento", "Fishery", "zooplankton", "Polyp (zoology)", "phosphate", "Jellyfish", "Eutrophication", "Cambrian", "pelagic fish", "Cnidaria", "Nutrient cycle", "Mnemiopsis", "Remineralisation", "Bering Sea", "Ctenophora", "krill", "Chromosomal translocation", "Fishing down the food web", "Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio", "Symbiosis", "Jellyfish Lake", "Pelagic zone", "Food web", "Jelly-falls", "nitrogen", "copepod", "Overexploitation", "excretion", "Chrysaora melanaster", "aquaculture", "Microbial population biology", "ichthyoplankton", "Palau", "crustacean", "Large marine ecosystem", "Substrate (biology)", "Neogene", "Chrysaora quinquecirrha", "decomposition", "Indian rupee", "Productivity (ecology)", "phosphorus", "Sea surface temperature", "eutrophication", "Dead zone (ecology)", "overfishing", "Hypoxia (environmental)", "Fauna", "tourism", "jellyfish", "Chesapeake Bay", "primary producers", "Redox", "phenology", "trophic level", "zooxanthellae", "oyster", "Nematocyst (dinoflagellate)" ]
62,112,970
File:The Green Ribbon (novel).jpg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
62,112,973
Template:Taxonomy/Pseudorestias
[]
62,112,974
Category:Afghan people of Russian descent
[]
62,112,985
Category:Ukrainian Long Range Aviation
This category is for former military units and air bases subordinate to the Central High Command of the Ukraine Air Force, which was the long-range aircraft of Ukraine. (1992-2007).
[ "Ukraine Air Force" ]
62,112,989
Emma Olive Dobbs House
The Emma Olive Dobbs House, at 578 E. Locust St. in Sandy, Utah, was built in the years around 1905–10. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. It was deemed significant as one of "the best preserved examples of the central-block-with-projecting-bays constructed during the same time period in Sandy". It was noted that it "is also expressive of the level of craftsmanship attained locally on the construction of such structures, including the use of native materials, such as the granite employed on the foundation."
[ "National Park Service", "National Register of Historic Places", "Sandy, Utah", "Tuscan order" ]
62,113,012
The Fellowship of the Frog
The Fellowship of the Frog is a 1925 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It was part of a series of books featuring the character Inspector Elk of Scotland Yard. In 1936 it was adapted into a West End play The Frog by Ian Hay, which inspired the subsequent films. ==Film adaptations== An American film serial Mark of the Frog was made in 1928. In 1937 it was turned into a British film The Frog directed by Jack Raymond and starring Gordon Harker as Elk. Due to its popularity, it was followed by a sequel The Return of the Frog the next year. In 1959 the West German film Der Frosch mit der Maske film was made, inspired by the novel. It commenced a lengthy series of Wallace adaptations made by Rialto Film made over the following decade.
[ "Gordon Harker", "Ward, Lock & Co.", "Jack Raymond", "Der Frosch mit der Maske", "United Kingdom", "The Nine Bears", "Scotland Yard", "West End theatre", "Mark of the Frog", "film serial", "Ian Hay", "Edgar Wallace", "The Frog (film)", "The Return of the Frog", "The Frog (play)", "crime novel", "Rialto Film" ]
62,113,021
Dimitrios Lalas
Dimitrios Stergios Lalas or Lallas () was a significant Greek composer and musician. == Biography == Lalas was born in 1844 or 1848 in Magarevo, then Ottoman Empire (now North Macedonia). He soon became the conductor of an Orchestra in Salzburg, while in Presburg he replaced the conductor Hans Richter at a concert of Wagner's works in the presence of Wagner himself. He cooperated with fellow Greek Macedonians, with whom he co-founded "Macedonian Defense" at the end of 1902, committees of which appeared in Greek Macedonian towns and villages, preparing its inhabitants for the upcoming Macedonian Struggle. At some point, before 1906, Lalas composed a musical work on the Macedonian Struggle, entitled "Makedonikos Paian" (Μακεδονικός Παιάν). He died of cholera in 1911 in Monastir, and his works were lost in 1917.
[ "Athens", "Heybeliada", "Orchestra", "Richard Wagner", "Thessaloniki", "Ottoman Empire", "University of Music and Performing Arts Munich", "Proto Thema", "Macedonian Struggle", "German people", "Salzburg", "Greeks", "Hans Richter (conductor)", "Emilios Riadis", "Magarevo", "Bitola", "Greek Macedonians", "Presburg", "cholera", "North Macedonia" ]
62,113,023
Elisa Carrillo Cabrera
Elisa Carrillo Cabrera (born 1981) is a Mexican classical ballet dancer. She is a co-director of the Mexican National Dance Company and principal dancer with the Berlin State Ballet (since 2011). == Early life and training == Carrillo was born in Texcoco, State of Mexico, and attended the Escuela de iniciación artística número 1, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura between 1988 and 1990, when she began her studies at the Escuela Nacional de Danza Clásica y Contemporánea, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura. In 1997, Carrillo moved to the United Kingdom, enrolling at the English National Ballet School until 1999. She was designed a Master of Ballet by the Ministry of Education of the Federal Republic of Germany, after she completed training at the John Cranko Schule Stuttgart, Germany between 2001 and 2003. == Professional career == Carrillo joined the Stuttgart Ballet in 1999 as a member of the corps de ballet. Prior to leaving the troupe in 2007, she was named a soloist. Following her departure from the Stuttgart Ballet, Carrillo joined the Berlin State Ballet as a demi-soloist, becoming principal dancer in 2011. She is the artistic director of Sir Anton Dolin Foundation. Carrillo founded the Elisa Carrillo Cabrera Foundation to allow other Mexican dancers opportunities to train abroad, and since 2018, host an annual international dance festival Danzatlán which includes the gala event Elisa y Amigos. In 2019, she won the Prix Benois de la Danse for Juliet in Nacho Duato's Romeo and Juliet. Carrillo is the second Mexican dancer to be awarded the Benois, after Isaac Hernández won it the previous year. She is also the first Latin American woman to win. Carrillo has made guest appearances in Paris, Japan, China, USA, Korea, Italy, Cairo, Switzerland, Singapore, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Luxembourg. Prix Benois de la Danse 2019 "Soul of dance" 2019 from the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation and the editors of the magazine "Ballet" == Personal life == Carrillo is married to Mikhail Kaniskin, a fellow principal dancer with Berlin State Ballet.
[ "principal dancer", "Romeo and Juliet (Prokofiev)", "La Sylphide", "Serenade (ballet)", "Sylvia (ballet)", "The Sleeping Beauty (ballet)", "English National Ballet School", "Mikhail Kaniskin", "Texcoco, State of Mexico", "FONCA", "Symphony in C (ballet)", "Les Sylphides", "Isaac Hernández", "Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura", "Dances at a Gathering", "Onegin (Cranko)", "Stuttgart Ballet", "Jewels (ballet)", "Swan Lake", "Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany)", "Giselle", "Don Quixote (ballet)", "Paquita", "Nacho Duato", "Prix Benois de la Danse", "Berlin State Ballet", "Romeo and Juliet (Cranko)", "The Nutcracker", "La Bayadère", "Theme and Variations" ]
62,113,025
Category:Distance education institutions based in the British Virgin Islands
[]
62,113,035
Görlitz, Germany
Redirect Görlitz
[ "Görlitz" ]
62,113,036
Microsoft Detours
__NOTOC__ Microsoft Detours is an open source library for intercepting, monitoring and instrumenting binary functions on Microsoft Windows. The interception code is applied dynamically at execution time. Detours is used by product teams at Microsoft and has also been used by ISVs. Prior to 2016, Detours was available in a free version limited for non-commercial and 32 bit only use and a paid version for commercial use. Since 2016, the source code is licensed under MIT License and available on GitHub.
[ "Dr. Watson (debugger)", "WinDbg", "Independent software vendor", "Dynamic-link library", "x86", "open source", "IA-64", "Microsoft Windows", "Microsoft Research", "Software library", "x64", "MIT License", "Microsoft", "C++", "Process Explorer", "execution time", "debugging", "software framework", "ARM architecture", "Win32 API", "ProcDump", "GitHub" ]
62,113,039
File:Singapore Taekwondo Federation logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[ "Singapore Taekwondo Federation" ]
69,404,816
File:Pimlico Plumbers logo.png
== Summary == ==Licensing==
[]
69,404,826
Maha Sawat, Nonthaburi
Maha Sawat (, ) is one of the nine subdistricts (tambon) of Bang Kruai district, in Nonthaburi province, Thailand. Neighbouring subdistricts are (from north clockwise) Bang Khun Kong, Bang Khanun, Wat Chalo, Taling Chan, Chimphli, Plai Bang and Bang Khu Wiang. In 2020 it had a total population of 20,697 people. ===Local administration=== The area of the subdistrict is shared by two local administrative organizations. Plai Bang Subdistrict Municipality () Maha Sawat Subdistrict Administrative Organization ()
[ "Provinces of Thailand", "Bang Kruai district", "muban", "Bang Khun Kong", "Chimphli", "Nonthaburi province", "Bang Khanun", "Bang Khu Wiang", "subdistrict", "TIS 1099", "tambon", "Subdistrict administrative organization", "Indochina Time", "thesaban", "Thailand", "Taling Chan subdistrict, Bangkok", "Tambon", "Plai Bang", "Wat Chalo subdistrict", "Districts of Thailand" ]
69,404,827
Filippo Distefano
Filippo Distefano (born 28 August 2003) is an Italian professional footballer who plays for club Frosinone, on loan from Fiorentina. == Early life == Filippo Distefano was born in Camaiore, a town in the Tuscan Province of Lucca, where he started to play football, at the club of Torre del Lago. == Club career == Distefano first joined US Livorno – that was then playing in Serie A under Davide Nicola – where he spent 3 years, before joining the youth sector of ACF Fiorentina. Having first been called to the first team by Vincenzo Italiano for the 20 November 2021 Serie A game against AC Milan, the young forward eventually made his professional debut for Fiorentina 10 days later, replacing José Callejón in the last minutes of a 3–1 Serie A home win against Sampdoria. On 9 August 2023, Distefano moved on loan to Serie B club Ternana. On 26 July 2024, Distefano was loaned by Frosinone.
[ "2021–22 Serie A", "Torre del Lago", "La Gazzetta dello Sport", "Tuscany", "ACF Fiorentina Youth Sector", "A.C. Milan", "Davide Nicola", "José Callejón", "Camaiore", "Frosinone Calcio", "U.C. Sampdoria", "U.S. Livorno 1915", "Province of Lucca", "forward (association football)", "Ternana Calcio", "La Nazione", "Campionato Primavera 1", "Coppa Italia Primavera", "2013–14 Serie A", "ACF Fiorentina", "Vincenzo Italiano", "Serie B" ]
69,404,829
Adams ex rel. Kasper v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida
Adams ex rel. Kasper v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida is a court case from the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit addressing whether schools can separate bathrooms on the basis of biological sex, and thus refuse to allow transgender students to use bathrooms that match their gender identity. The case was filed by Erica Adams Kasper on behalf of Drew Adams, a minor at the time, against the school board of St. Johns County, Florida, in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida. The lawsuit was filed after Adams was denied access to the boys' bathrooms at Nease High School. Kasper claimed that Adams's rights were being violated on account of discriminated on the basis of sex, which is prohibited by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, and a violation of the equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. Adams has been using the boys' bathrooms for the six weeks of freshman year when, following an anonymous complaint from two female students, Adams was informed that only the use of the gender-neutral bathrooms or the girls' bathrooms would be acceptable. The plaintiff argued that Title IX protections encompass gender identity, and thus policies or rules governing schools may not turn on one's sex as assigned at birth. Kasper was represented by the LGBTQ rights law organization Lambda Legal, and was supported in amicus briefs by over fifty organizations, including the National Women's Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League. ADL's brief made the argument that the school board's "protective concerns" were invalid because they were based on discriminatory stereotypes and that there was no evidence that use of the restroom corresponding to gender identity in the county's schools caused any injury or harm to students. Judge Wilson wrote that the bathroom policy was discriminatory because "[u]nderlying this sex-assigned-at-matriculation bathroom policy, however, is the presumption that biological sex is accurately determinable at birth and that it is a static or permanent biological determination." Judge Jill Pryor wrote that "gender identity is an immutable, biological component of a person's sex" and that "birth-assigned sex and chromosomal structure take a back seat in determining a person's sex when that person's gender identity diverges from those two components." Pryor also wrote that Judge Jordan wrote that the policy "can only be justified by administrative convenience. And when intermediate scrutiny applies, administrative convenience is an insufficient justification for a gender-based classification."
[ "Bathroom bills", "Lambda Legal", "gender identity", "amicus curiae", "Education Amendments of 1972", "Britt Grant", "Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution", "United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit", "Robert J. Luck", "Timothy J. Corrigan", "United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida", "William H. Pryor Jr.", "National Women's Law Center", "s:Adams ex rel. Kasper v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida (2020)", "Anti-Defamation League", "G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board", "sex", "Charles R. Wilson (judge)", "Andrew L. Brasher", "transgender", "Elizabeth L. Branch", "Title IX", "s:Adams ex rel. Kasper v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida (2018)", "Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins", "Robin S. Rosenbaum", "Beverly B. Martin", "NBC News", "Sex assignment", "Kevin Newsom", "en banc", "s:Adams ex rel. Kasper v. School Board of St. Johns County, Florida (2022)", "Doe v. Clenchy", "Growing Up Coy", "Adalberto Jordan", "Equal Protection Clause", "Barbara Lagoa", "National Review", "Allen D. Nease High School", "Jill A. Pryor", "St. Johns County, Florida" ]
69,404,830
Bang Khu Wiang
Bang Khu Wiang (, ) is one of the nine subdistricts (tambon) of Bang Kruai District, in Nonthaburi Province, Thailand. The subdistrict is bounded by (clockwise from north) Bang Muang, Bang Len, Bang Krang, Bang Khun Kong, Maha Sawat and Plai Bang subdistricts. In 2020, it had a total population of 10,747 people. ===Local administration=== The whole area of the subdistrict is covered by Plai Bang Subdistrict Municipality ().
[ "subdistrict", "Maha Sawat, Nonthaburi", "tambon", "Bang Khun Kong", "Bang Len Subdistrict, Nonthaburi", "Bang Kruai District", "Nonthaburi Province", "Provinces of Thailand", "Indochina Time", "Amphoe", "thesaban", "TIS 1099", "Thailand", "Bang Muang, Nonthaburi", "Tambon", "muban", "Plai Bang", "Bang Krang" ]
69,404,831
File:Piratski pokret (Pirate movement) NGO logo.png
== Summary == ==Licensing==
[]
69,404,832
Plai Bang
Plai Bang (, ) is one of the nine subdistricts (tambon) of Bang Kruai District, in Nonthaburi Province, Thailand. Neighbouring subdistricts are (from north clockwise) Bang Muang, Bang Khu Wiang, Maha Sawat, Chimphli, Sala Thammasop and Sala Klang. In 2020 it had a total population of 19,358 people. ===Local administration=== The whole area of the subdistrict is covered by Plai Bang Subdistrict Municipality ().
[ "subdistrict", "Maha Sawat, Nonthaburi", "tambon", "Bang Kruai District", "Chimphli", "Nonthaburi Province", "Provinces of Thailand", "Indochina Time", "Amphoe", "thesaban", "TIS 1099", "Thailand", "Bang Muang, Nonthaburi", "Tambon", "muban", "Sala Klang", "Sala Thammasop", "Bang Khu Wiang" ]
69,404,839
Sala Klang
Sala Klang (, ) is one of the nine subdistricts (tambon) of Bang Kruai District, in Nonthaburi Province, Thailand. The subdistrict is bounded by (clockwise from north) Bang Yai, Bang Muang, Plai Bang, Sala Thammasop and Sala Ya subdistricts. In 2020 it had a total population of 20,057 people. ===Local administration=== The whole area of the subdistrict is covered by Sala Klang Subdistrict Municipality ().
[ "subdistrict", "tambon", "Bang Kruai District", "Nonthaburi Province", "Provinces of Thailand", "Indochina Time", "Amphoe", "thesaban", "TIS 1099", "Thailand", "Bang Muang, Nonthaburi", "Tambon", "Bang Yai Subdistrict, Nonthaburi", "Plai Bang", "Sala Thammasop", "muban", "Sala Ya" ]
69,404,841
Bradley Lock and Key
Bradley Lock and Key, also known as Bradley's Locksmith, is a locksmiths located in Savannah, Georgia, United States. Established in 1883, it is the oldest business in operation in Savannah, and one of the oldest locksmith shops in the country. It has been located at its current address, the Patrick Duffy Building at 24 East State Street, in the northeast tything block of Wright Square, since 1967. The building it occupies was built in 1885. Its owner from the 1950s until 2019 was William Houdini Bradley, known as Dini, whose grandfather, Simon, started the business. His father, Aaron, meanwhile, was a hypnotist who travelled with Houdini, hence William's middle name. A third generation of Bradley family members, William retired in 2019 at the age of 85, at which point he handed the business over to his grandson, 24-year-old Andrew Bradley, extending the business's lifespan to five generations. Andrew and his sister, Caroline, used to work at the shop in the summers of their youth. Dini Bradley's son, Mark, is a Savannah attorney. Bradley's brother, Milton, who was often present at the shop, was murdered in Savannah in 1994 at the age of 72. A World War II Navy veteran, he was one of six people murdered by serial killer Gary Ray Bowles. Bowles confessed to the killings but was not convicted until 25 years later. He was given the death penalty and died by lethal injection in a Florida state prison in August 2019. Another of Bradley's brothers, Eddie, worked at the shop. He died in 2016, aged 89.
[ "WSAV-TV", "hypnotist", "Houdini", "Savannah Morning News", "University of North Florida", "locksmiths", "serial killer", "Squares of Savannah", "Florida", "lethal injection", "The Washington Post", "United States Navy", "State Street (Savannah, Georgia)", "W. W. Law", "Bonaventure Cemetery", "WTOC-TV", "death penalty", "Wright Square", "World War II", "Gary Ray Bowles", "Garden & Gun", "Savannah, Georgia", "Civil Rights", "state prison", "Locksmiths" ]
69,404,853
Daviesia dielsii
Daviesia dielsii, commonly known as Diels' daviesia, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is on intricately-branched shrub with sharply-pointed, egg-shaped, vertically compressed phyllodes, and yellow and red flowers. ==Description== Daviesia dielsii is an intricately-branched shrub that typically grows to about high and wide. Its leaves are reduced to moderately crowded, sharply-pointed, vertically compressed, egg-shaped phyllodes with the narrower end towards the base, long, wide and thick. The flowers are arranged singly in leaf axils on a pedicel long with bracts long in clusters at the base. The sepals are long and joined at the base with lobes about long, the two upper lobes are joined and the lower three triangular. The standard petal is elliptic, long and wide, and yellow with a red centre. The wings are long and maroon, and the keel is long and red. Flowering mainly occurs from March to August and the fruit is an inflated, triangular pod long. ==Taxonomy and naming== Daviesia dielsii was first formally described in 1904 by Ernst Georg Pritzel in Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie. The specific epithet (dielsii) honours Ludwig Diels. ==Distribution and habitat== Diels' daviesia grows in kwongan heath and on disturbed roadsides in the Dalwallinu-Moora-Three Springs area where it is known from fifteen populations. ==Conservation status== Daviesia dielsii is listed as "endangered" under the Australian Government Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and as "Threatened Flora (Declared Rare Flora — Extant)" by the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. The main threats to the species are road maintenance activities and weed invasion.
[ "Three Springs, Western Australia", "sepal", "phyllode", "Pedicel (botany)", "E.Pritz.", "Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999", "Ludwig Diels", "Dalwallinu", "bract", "Declared Rare and Priority Flora List", "Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions (Western Australia)", "Binomial nomenclature", "Pod (fruit)", "endemic", "Marchagee", "kwongan", "Ernst Georg Pritzel", "Moora, Western Australia", "List of E. Schweizerbart serials", "Papilionaceous flower", "Fabaceae" ]
69,404,855
2022 Southeastern Conference football season
The 2022 Southeastern Conference football season is the 90th season of Southeastern Conference (SEC) football, taking place during the 2022 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season began on August 27, 2022 and ended with the 2022 SEC Championship Game on December 3, 2022. The SEC is a Power Five conference as part of the College Football Playoff system. ==Previous season== Alabama defeated Georgia 41–24 in the 2021 SEC Championship Game. Alabama and Georgia were selected to play in the 2022 College Football Playoff. No. 1 Alabama defeated No. 4 Cincinnati 27–6 in the Cotton Bowl Classic CFP semifinal game. No. 3 Georgia defeated No. 2 Michigan 34–11 in the Orange Bowl CFP semifinal game. Alabama and Georgia met on January 10, 2022, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana in a rematch of the 2021 SEC Championship game and 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship to play for the 2022 College Football Playoff National Championship. Georgia defeated Alabama 33–18, winning their third national championship in school history and their first since 1980. Eleven other SEC teams accepted invitations to bowl games, but Texas A&M was unable to play in the Gator Bowl due to injuries and sickness from COVID-19, so only 10 teams played in their bowl games. Results from the rest of the SEC bowl games: South Carolina defeated North Carolina 38–21 in the Duke's Mayo Bowl. Arkansas defeated Penn State 24–10 in the Outback Bowl. Kentucky defeated Iowa 20–17 in the Citrus Bowl. Missouri lost to Army 24–22 in the Armed Forces Bowl. Florida lost to UCF 29–17 in the Gasparilla Bowl. Auburn lost to Houston 17–13 in the Birmingham Bowl. Mississippi State lost to Texas Tech 34–7 in the Liberty Bowl. Tennessee lost to Purdue 48–45 in overtime in the Music City Bowl. Ole Miss lost to Baylor 21–7 in the Sugar Bowl. Louisiana State lost to Kansas State 42–20 in the TaxAct Texas Bowl. ==Preseason== 2022 SEC Spring Football and number of signees on signing day: East Division Georgia – Florida – Kentucky – Missouri – South Carolina – Tennessee – Vanderbilt - West Division Alabama – Arkansas – Auburn – LSU – Mississippi State – Ole Miss – Texas A&M - ===Recruiting classes=== ===SEC Media Days=== The 2022 SEC Media days were held on July 18–21, 2022 at College Football Hall of Fame and The Omni Atlanta Hotel at CNN Center in Atlanta, GA. The Preseason Polls were released in July 2022. Each team had their head coach available to talk to the media at the event. Coverage of the event was televised on SEC Network and ESPN. The teams and representatives in respective order were as follows: SEC Commissioner – Greg Sankey Monday July 18 LSU – Brian Kelly (HC), Jack Bech (WR), Mike Jones Jr. (LB) and BJ Ojulari (DE) Ole Miss – Lane Kiffin (HC), Jonathan Mingo (WR), Cedric Johnson (DE) and Nick Broeker (OL) Missouri - Eliah Drinkwitz (HC), Barrett Banister (WR), Martez Manuel (DB) and Isaiah McGuire (DL) Tuesday July 19 Alabama – Nick Saban (HC), Bryce Young (QB), Jordan Battle (DL) and Will Anderson Jr. (LB) Mississippi State – Mike Leach (HC), Jaden Crumedy (DT), Nathaniel Watson (LB) and Austin Williams (WR) South Carolina – Shane Beamer (HC), Jovaughn Gwyn (OL), Dakereon Joyner (WR), Zacch Pickens (DL) Vanderbilt – Clark Lea (HC), Ben Bresnahan (TE), Anfernee Orji (LB) and Mike Wright (QB) Wednesday July 20 Arkansas – Sam Pittman (HC), Jalen Catalon (S), KJ Jefferson (QB) and Bumper Pool (LB) Florida – Billy Napier (HC), Anthony Richardson (QB), Richard Gouraige (OL) and Ventrell Miller (LB) Georgia – Kirby Smart (HC), Stetson Bennett IV (QB), Nolan Smith (LB) and Sedrick Van Pran-Granger (OL) Kentucky – Mark Stoops (HC), Will Levis (QB), Kenneth Horsey (OG) and DeAndre Square (LB) Thursday July 21 Auburn – Bryan Harsin (HC), Tank Bigsby (RB), Derick Hall (DE) and John Samuel Shenker (TE) Tennessee - Josh Heupel (HC), Trevon Flowers (S), Hendon Hooker (QB) and Cedric Tillman (WR) Texas A&M – Jimbo Fisher (HC), Demani Richardson (DB), Layden Robinson (OL) and Ainias Smith (WR) ====Preseason media polls==== ===Preseason awards=== ====All−American Teams==== ====Individual awards==== ====Preseason All-SEC==== =====Media===== References: =====Coaches===== References: ==Head coaches== There was two coaching changes before the 2022 season. ===Coaches=== Note: All stats current through the completion of the 2021 season ===Mid-season changes=== On October 31, Auburn fired head coach Bryan Harsin after posting a 9–12 record with the school over two years. Cadillac Williams was named the interim head coach for the remainder of the season. On November 28, Auburn announced that they had signed Liberty head coach Hugh Freeze to take over their head coaching position beginning in 2023. ===Post-season changes=== On December 12, Mississippi State head coach Mike Leach died after suffering a major heart attack. Mississippi State still elected to play in their bowl game. Defensive coordinator Zach Arnett was named interim head coach during Leach's hospitalization and promoted to permanent head coach after Leach's death. ==Rankings== ==Regular season== The 2022 schedule was released on September 21, 2021. The season began on August 27, 2022, and will end with the SEC Championship Game on December 3, 2022. ===Week Zero=== ===Week One=== ===Week Two=== ===Week Three=== ===Week Four=== === Week Five === === Week Six === ===Week Seven=== ===Week Eight=== ===Week Nine=== ===Week Ten=== ===Week Eleven=== ===Week Twelve=== ===Week Thirteen=== ===Championship Game=== ==Postseason== ===Bowl games=== For the 2020–2025 bowl cycle, The SEC will have annually eight appearances in the following bowls: Sugar Bowl and Peach Bowl (unless they are selected for playoffs filled by a Big 12 and at-large team if champion is in the playoffs), Citrus Bowl, Gator Bowl, Las Vegas Bowl, Liberty Bowl, Music City Bowl, ReliaQuest Bowl and Texas Bowl. The SEC teams will go to a New Year's Six bowl if a team finishes higher than the champions of Power Five conferences in the final College Football Playoff rankings. The SEC champion are also eligible for the College Football Playoff if they're among the top four teams in the final CFP ranking. Rankings are from CFP Poll. All times Central Time Zone. ==Head to head matchups== Updated with the results of all games through November 2022. === SEC vs Power Five matchups === The following games include SEC teams competing against Power Five conferences teams from the (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, BYU/Notre Dame and Pac-12). All rankings are from the AP Poll at the time of the game. === SEC vs Group of Five matchups === The following games include SEC teams competing against "Group of Five" teams from the American, C-USA, MAC, Mountain West and Sun Belt. === SEC vs FBS independents matchups === The following games include SEC teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, UConn and UMass. === SEC vs FCS matchups === The Football Championship Subdivision comprises 13 conferences and two independent programs.
[ "2022 Texas Bowl (January)", "Hudson Clark", "Tank Bigsby", "Ben Hill Griffin Stadium", "2022 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team", "Huskie Stadium", "Arkansas Razorbacks football", "Mike Leach (American football coach)", "2022 Purdue Boilermakers football team", "Florida Gators football", "Bryant-Denny Stadium", "Tykee Smith", "Butkus Award", "Jacobs Blocking Trophy", "Mason Taylor", "2022 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team", "Greg Sankey", "Chicago Bears", "Detroit Lions", "Las Vegas, Nevada", "2021 Duke's Mayo Bowl", "Harrison Mevis", "Emmanuel Forbes", "2022 South Carolina State Bulldogs football team", "Georgia–South Carolina football rivalry", "List of first overall National Football League Draft picks", "Dominic Lovett", "2022 Iowa Hawkeyes football team", "Trevor Etienne", "DeKalb, Illinois", "2021 Orange Bowl (December)", "Will Reichard", "Columbia, Missouri", "Fox College Football", "2021 Ole Miss Rebels football team", "Derick Hall", "FirstBank Stadium", "Ladd McConkey", "Cameron Latu", "Davey O'Brien Award", "Safety (gridiron football position)", "Denver Broncos", "Tuscaloosa, Alabama", "Cedric Tillman (American football, born 2000)", "Pittsburgh", "Kayshon Boutte", "2023 NFL draft", "Clark Lea", "2022 Peach Bowl", "Magnolia Bowl", "Jordan Burch", "J. J. Weaver", "Columbia, South Carolina", "Florida–Tennessee football rivalry", "Dallas Cowboys", "NCAA Division I", "CBSSN", "Ole Miss–Vanderbilt football rivalry", "2021 Birmingham Bowl", "2022 Penn State Nittany Lions football team", "Jaden Crumedy", "Will Campbell (offensive lineman)", "Cleveland Browns", "Robert Beal Jr.", "Broderick Jones", "2022 Mountain West Conference football season", "Running back", "Allegiant Stadium", "Alabama–Ole Miss football rivalry", "2022 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team", "Davis Wade Stadium", "Alabama–LSU football rivalry", "2022 East Tennessee State Buccaneers football team", "2022 UAB Blazers football team", "Sedrick Van Pran-Granger", "Tennessee Titans", "Provo, Utah", "San Francisco 49ers", "Hard Rock Stadium", "Inglewood, California", "Nick Broeker", "Tight end", "2022 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team", "Memorial Stadium (Clemson)", "2021 North Carolina Tar Heels football team", "Jordan–Hare Stadium", "Faurot Field", "Dylan Sampson", "2022 Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks football team", "Luther Burden III", "Honolulu", "Gervon Dexter", "Associated Press", "Arik Gilbert", "Philadelphia Eagles", "2022 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team", "Kyle Field", "College Football Playoff", "DeMarcco Hellams", "SoFi Stadium", "LaVell Edwards Stadium", "Barion Brown", "2022 Utah Utes football team", "Conference USA", "Darnell Wright", "BYU Cougars football", "Punter (American football)", "Will Anderson Jr.", "2021 Houston Cougars football team", "Lou Groza Award", "New Orleans, Louisiana", "Head coach", "2022 Clemson Tigers football team", "Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium", "2022 Memphis Tigers football team", "D. J. Dale", "2021 Alabama Crimson Tide football team", "Kool-Aid McKinstry", "Warren McClendon", "Nolan Smith (American football)", "2022 Oregon Ducks football team", "2022 Arizona Wildcats football team", "Pro Football Focus", "2021 Iowa Hawkeyes football team", "Anders Carlson (American football)", "2022 Elon Phoenix football team", "Wuerffel Trophy", "Linebacker", "Arizona Stadium", "2021 Arkansas Razorbacks football team", "Sam Pittman", "Seattle Seahawks", "Javion Cohen", "Jaylon Jones (American football, born 2002)", "Austin Stogner", "Atlantic Coast Conference", "McKinnley Jackson", "Battle Line Rivalry", "A. J. Finley", "Jermaine Burton", "2022 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team", "Atlanta", "Carolina Panthers", "Indianapolis Colts", "New Orleans", "Tennessee Volunteers football", "2022 New Mexico State Aggies football team", "2022 Kansas Jayhawks football team", "2022 Liberty Bowl", "Anthony Bradford", "COVID-19 pandemic", "2021 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team", "Bryant–Denny Stadium", "Arizona Cardinals", "Kris Abrams-Draine", "Orlando, Florida", "Zacch Pickens", "2022 Ball State Cardinals football team", "2022 Sam Houston State Bearkats football team", "Heinz Field", "Los Angeles Rams", "2022 Mid-American Conference football season", "Quinshon Judkins", "Cam Little", "New York Giants", "Tallahassee, Florida", "2022 Charlotte 49ers football team", "Auburn Tigers football", "Javon Foster", "Mid-American Conference", "Music City Bowl", "Vaught-Hemingway Stadium", "Center (gridiron football)", "Brock Bowers", "Jalen Brooks", "2021 Florida Gators football team", "Nick Saban", "Hendon Hooker", "Kentucky Wildcats football", "Josh Heupel", "Tennessee–Vanderbilt football rivalry", "Raymond James Stadium", "ESPN College Football", "Paul Hornung Award", "Manhattan, Kansas", "New England Patriots", "2021 Texas A&M Aggies football team", "Isaiah McGuire", "Mark Stoops", "Ainias Smith", "Southeastern Conference", "Kentucky–Tennessee rivalry", "2022 Outback Bowl", "LSU–Mississippi State football rivalry", "Jack Bech", "Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game", "2022 Austin Peay Governors football team", "Malachi Moore", "2021 LSU Tigers football team", "Jalen Catalon", "Doak Campbell Stadium", "MarShawn Lloyd", "Austin, Texas", "John Mackey Award", "Drew Sanders", "2022 Central Arkansas Bears football team", "Arkansas–Texas A&M football rivalry", "South Carolina Gamecocks football", "De’Von Achane", "SEC Network", "Jimbo Fisher", "Cartavious Bigsby", "Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium", "Jarrick Bernard-Converse", "Christopher Smith II", "2022 Music City Bowl", "Bednarik Award", "2022 Youngstown State Penguins football team", "Texas A&M Aggies football", "2022 Kentucky Wildcats football team", "Alabama–Mississippi State football rivalry", "Zach Evans", "Gainesville, Florida", "ESPN3", "Jacksonville, Florida", "Anthony Richardson (American football)", "Eliah Drinkwitz", "Byron Young (American football, born 1998)", "Clemson–South Carolina rivalry", "Citrus Bowl", "Arkansas–Ole Miss football rivalry", "Owen Pappoe", "Oxford, Mississippi", "American Athletic Conference", "ESPN2 College Football Saturday Primetime", "2022 NCAA Division I FCS football rankings", "ESPN", "2022 Pac-12 Conference football season", "Williams-Brice Stadium", "Jared Ivey", "2022 Sun Belt Conference football season", "Harold Perkins", "Gator Bowl", "Mike Wright (quarterback)", "Jay Ward (American football)", "2022 Missouri State Bears football team", "Sugar Bowl Game", "Cadillac Williams", "1980 Georgia Bulldogs football team", "Will Levis", "2022 Texas Bowl (December)", "2022 Alabama Crimson Tide football team", "Jovaughn Gwyn", "2023 College Football Playoff National Championship", "2021 Gasparilla Bowl", "Williams–Brice Stadium", "Jordan Battle", "Outland Trophy", "Jonathan Mingo", "2022 Georgia State Panthers football team", "Georgia–Vanderbilt football rivalry", "Chris Rodriguez Jr.", "Las Vegas Raiders", "Minnesota Vikings", "BJ Ojulari", "Quarterback", "LSU–Texas A&M football rivalry", "2021 Baylor Bears football team", "2022 Sugar Bowl (January)", "2022 Mercer Bears football team", "Knoxville, Tennessee", "Clemson, South Carolina", "Mercedes-Benz Stadium", "Darius Rush", "Offensive tackle", "Ted Hendricks Award", "2021 Army Black Knights football team", "Jaquelin Roy", "Brian Kelly (American football coach)", "2022 Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football team", "Justin Eboigbe", "2022 Tennessee Volunteers football team", "2021 SEC Championship Game", "2021 Cotton Bowl Classic", "ESPN+", "Amari Burney", "Kentucky–Vanderbilt football rivalry", "2022 Louisville Cardinals football team", "LSU Tigers football", "Governor's Cup (Kentucky)", "Eli Ricks", "Bronko Nagurski Trophy", "2022 NCAA Division I FCS football season", "Memphis, Tennessee", "Lane Kiffin", "Defensive tackle", "Jayden Daniels", "2022 Kansas State Wildcats football team", "2021 Gator Bowl (December)", "2022 College Football Playoff National Championship", "2022 Big 12 Conference football season", "Tyler Steen", "Hurricane Ian", "Nik Constantinou", "Pittsburgh Steelers", "Wide receiver", "Florida–LSU football rivalry", "2022 Texas A&M Aggies football team", "Washington Commanders", "2022 NCAA Division I FBS football season", "Jase McClellan", "Defensive end", "Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award", "Raheim Sanders", "2022 Atlantic Coast Conference football season", "Baton Rouge, Louisiana", "Kingsley Eguakun", "Lideatrick Griffin", "Billy Napier", "2021 Southeastern Conference football season", "2022 Akron Zips football team", "NCAA Division I FBS independent schools", "Henry To'oTo'o", "Sun Belt Conference", "Dwight McGlothern", "Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium", "Atlanta, Georgia", "Lott Trophy", "Stetson Bennett", "Doak Walker Award", "Kearis Jackson", "Football Championship Subdivision", "2021 Michigan Wolverines football team", "2021 South Carolina Gamecocks football team", "John Samuel Shenker", "Dallas Turner", "Lombardi Award", "Antwane Wells Jr.", "Texas Bowl", "ESPN College Football on ABC", "Las Vegas Bowl", "2022 Illinois Fighting Illini football team", "Miami", "JoJo Earle", "Pac-12 Conference", "2021 Music City Bowl", "Manning Award", "Houston", "Auburn–Ole Miss football rivalry", "2022 Texas Longhorns football team", "2022 Sugar Bowl (December)", "Auburn–LSU football rivalry", "Branson Robinson", "Atlanta Falcons", "2022 Gator Bowl", "2021 Armed Forces Bowl", "Walter Camp Award", "2022 Cincinnati Bearcats football team", "Deone Walker", "Georgia Bulldogs football", "ESPN2", "Missouri Tigers football", "College Station, Texas", "Miami Dolphins", "2021 Tennessee Volunteers football team", "Placekicker", "2022 UConn Huskies football team", "Colby Wooden", "2022 South Carolina Gamecocks football team", "2022 Las Vegas Bowl", "Reuben Fatheree II", "Marcellas Dial", "Jalin Hyatt", "Cedric Johnson", "Darnell Washington", "2021 Auburn Tigers football team", "Notre Dame Fighting Irish football", "College Football on CBS Sports", "Punter (football)", "Auburn, Alabama", "Vaught–Hemingway Stadium", "List of All-SEC Conference football teams", "Alabama Crimson Tide football", "2022 Samford Bulldogs football team", "Layden Robinson", "Xavier Legette", "Peach Bowl", "Liberty Bowl", "Ricky Stromberg", "Malaki Starks", "Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania", "Bumper Pool (American football)", "Lexington, Kentucky", "2022 Orange Bowl", "2022 LSU Tigers football team", "Tayvion Robinson", "2022 South Florida Bulls football team", "Brian Branch", "Nathaniel Watson", "2022 Pittsburgh Panthers football team", "Bobby Dodd Stadium", "2022 Arkansas Razorbacks football team", "Liberty Flames football", "Fred Biletnikoff Award", "2023 Southeastern Conference football season", "Bill Snyder Family Stadium", "Return specialist", "Ole Miss Rebels football", "Cameron Young (American football)", "Jordan-Hare Stadium", "Starkville, Mississippi", "Haynes King (American football)", "Camping World Stadium", "2022 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team", "2022 Northern Illinois Huskies football team", "2022 Auburn Tigers football team", "2022 Florida Gators football team", "2021 UCF Knights football team", "Maxwell Award", "Athens, Georgia", "2022 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team", "2021 Penn State Nittany Lions football team", "Jaheim Bell", "SEC on CBS", "Big Ten Conference", "Byron Young (American football, born 2000)", "Kroger Field", "2021 Missouri Tigers football team", "Iron Bowl", "Nazir Stackhouse", "2022 UMass Minutemen football team", "Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate", "Clarence T. C. Ching Athletics Complex", "2022 Army Black Knights football team", "Arkansas–LSU football rivalry", "Tiger Stadium (Baton Rouge)", "2022 American Athletic Conference football season", "Darrian Dalcourt", "Bryan Harsin", "2022 Abilene Christian Wildcats football team", "Mississippi State Bulldogs football", "Maason Smith", "Baltimore Ravens", "Micah Baskerville", "Egg Bowl", "Maxwell Football Club", "Deep South's Oldest Rivalry", "Central Time Zone", "2021 Kansas State Wildcats football team", "Demani Richardson", "De'Von Achane", "Florida–Florida State football rivalry", "2022 Troy Trojans football team", "Buffalo Bills", "2022 SEC Championship Game", "2023 Citrus Bowl", "Tavius Robinson", "Tampa, Florida", "Ali Gaye", "Jacksonville Jaguars", "Mekhi Wingo", "Tyrus Wheat", "Tucson, Arizona", "2022 Conference USA football season", "Power Five conferences", "Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award", "Arlington, Texas", "Georgia–Tennessee football rivalry", "National Collegiate Athletic Association", "Bryce Young", "Javontez Spraggins", "2022 UT Martin Skyhawks football team", "New Year's Six", "Hugh Freeze", "New York Jets", "2022 Utah State Aggies football team", "Neyland Stadium", "Trey Dean", "Fayetteville, Arkansas", "ReliaQuest Bowl", "O'Cyrus Torrence", "Kenny McIntosh", "College Football All-America Team", "Florida–Georgia football rivalry", "Will Rogers (American football)", "2022 Big Ten Conference football season", "Zach Calzada", "Ray Guy Award", "Michael Trigg (tight end)", "2022 Liberty Flames football team", "Cincinnati Bengals", "Brenton Cox Jr.", "Sanford Stadium", "2021 Liberty Bowl", "KJ Jefferson", "AJ Swann", "ESPNU", "Tiger Stadium (LSU)", "Ventrell Miller", "2022 Southern Jaguars football team", "2022 Bowling Green Falcons football team", "Vanderbilt Stadium", "Justin Shorter", "2022 Oregon State Beavers football team", "Nissan Stadium", "Kirby Smart", "2022 Gasparilla Bowl", "2022 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings", "Jim Thorpe Award", "Spencer Rattler", "Carrington Valentine", "Jo'Quavious Marks", "Green Bay Packers", "2022 Kent State Golden Flashes football team", "Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award", "2021 Georgia Bulldogs football team", "Jamon Dumas-Johnson", "Mountain West Conference", "2023 ReliaQuest Bowl", "2022 TCU Horned Frogs football team", "2022 Miami RedHawks football team", "2021 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team", "Shane Beamer", "Anfernee Orji", "2022 Miami Hurricanes football team", "Conner Weigman", "2022 New Mexico Lobos football team", "2022 Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks football team", "2021 Cincinnati Bearcats football team", "Myocardial infarction", "Nashville, Tennessee", "2022 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team", "2022 Georgia Bulldogs football team", "2022 Florida State Seminoles football team", "Big 12 Conference", "Jahmyr Gibbs", "2022 Ole Miss Rebels football team", "2022 Eastern Washington Eagles football team", "Antonio Johnson (defensive back)", "2022 Citrus Bowl", "2021 Kentucky Wildcats football team", "Cam Smith (cornerback)", "2022 Missouri Tigers football team", "College Football", "2022 Ohio State Buckeyes football team", "Jalen Carter", "Guard (gridiron football)", "2022 BYU Cougars football team", "TIAA Bank Field", "2021 Purdue Boilermakers football team", "NRG Stadium", "Third Saturday in October", "Patrick Mannelly Award", "Cornerback", "Richard Gouraige", "Caesars Superdome", "2022 San Jose State Spartans football team", "Jack Podlesny", "Emil Ekiyor Jr.", "2022 Vanderbilt Commodores football team", "Rimington Trophy", "Tiger Stadium (Louisiana)", "Kelee Ringo", "Houston Texans", "Jayden McGowan", "ESPNU College Football", "AT&T Stadium", "NCAA Division I FBS football season", "2018 College Football Playoff National Championship", "Zach Arnett", "Dane Key" ]
69,404,857
File:Adelaide plains footleague logo.png
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]
69,404,861
Template:2021 Lanka Premier League Points table
The top four teams qualified for the playoffs Advanced to Qualifier 1 Advanced to Eliminator
[ "Galle Gladiators in 2021", "Dambulla Giants in 2021", "2021 Lanka Premier League", "Jaffna Kings in 2021", "Colombo Stars in 2021", "Kandy Warriors in 2021" ]
69,404,864
Category:English Ashkenazi Jews
[]
69,404,865
Template:2022 Southeastern Conference football standings
[ "2022 Ole Miss Rebels football team", "SEC Championship Game", "2022 Arkansas Razorbacks football team", "2022 Missouri Tigers football team", "2022 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings", "2022 Florida Gators football team", "2022 Auburn Tigers football team", "2022 South Carolina Gamecocks football team", "2022 SEC Championship Game", "2022 Kentucky Wildcats football team", "2022 Alabama Crimson Tide football team", "2022 Vanderbilt Commodores football team", "2022 Tennessee Volunteers football team", "2022 Georgia Bulldogs football team", "2022 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team", "2022 LSU Tigers football team", "2022 Texas A&M Aggies football team" ]
69,404,867
Wikipedia:Administrators' newsletter/2022/1
News and updates for administrators from the past month (December 2021). Administrator changes Amalthea • Ihcoyc (deceased) • Kateshortforbob • Kirill Lokshin • Rifleman 82 • Ryan Norton • Wrp103 Interface administrator changes Mr. Stradivarius CheckUser changes Cabayi • Donald Albury • Enterprisey • Izno • Wugapodes Opabinia regalis Casliber • David Fuchs • Newyorkbrad • SoWhy Oversighter changes Cabayi • Donald Albury • Enterprisey • Izno • Wugapodes Opabinia regalis Casliber • David Fuchs • Newyorkbrad • SoWhy Guideline and policy news Following consensus at the 2021 RfA review, the autopatrolled user right has been removed from the administrators user group; admins can grant themselves the autopatrolled permission if they wish to remain autopatrolled. Additionally, consensus for proposal 6C of the 2021 RfA review has led to the creation of an administrative action review process. The purpose of this process will be to review individual administrator actions and individual actions taken by users holding advanced permissions. Arbitration Following the 2021 Arbitration Committee elections, the following editors have been appointed to the Arbitration Committee: , , , , , , , . Miscellaneous The functionaries email list () will no longer accept incoming emails apart from those sent by list members and WMF staff. Private concerns, apart from those requiring oversight, should be directly sent to the Arbitration Committee. ----
[ "WP:RFA2021/P", "Wikipedia talk:Administrators' newsletter", "WP:PERM" ]
69,404,872
Ali Abu Eshrein
{{Infobox football biography | name = Ali Abu-Eshrein | image = | fullname = Ali Abdallah Abu-Eshrein Darasha | birth_place = Sudan | birth_date =
[ "Al-Shurta SC (Al-Qadaref)", "Al-Hilal Club (Omdurman)", "Association football", "Sudan national football team", "Al-Merrikh SC", "Alamal SC Atbara", "Al-Nesoor SC", "Al-Amir SC (Bahri)", "FIFA", "Goalkeeper (association football)", "Al-Hilal (Omdurman)" ]
69,404,877
File:Port Moody Police Department logo.png
== Summary == == Licensing ==
[]
69,404,887
Lockwood & Co. (TV series)
Lockwood & Co. is a British supernatural detective thriller television series developed by Joe Cornish for Netflix based on Jonathan Stroud's book series of the same name. Consisting of eight episodes, it premiered on 27 January 2023. It follows the plots of the first two books, The Screaming Staircase and The Whispering Skull. In May 2023, the series was cancelled after one season. ==Premise== In an alternate version of present-day Britain, ghosts who are deadly to the touch have been rising from their graves for 50 years. Because of this phenomenon, known as "The Problem", technological advances have stopped; for example, there is no internet and people still use cassette recorders. Adults cannot sense the ghosts, but children can, so teenagers have been organised into licensed ghost-hunting agencies to detect and dispose of threats. Lucy Carlyle, a psychically gifted teenager, runs away from home and comes to London in the hope of catching on at an agency. Running out of options, she applies for a job at a tiny outfit run by two boys in an old townhouse: Lockwood & Co. ==Cast and characters== ===Main=== Ruby Stokes as Lucy Carlyle, a highly talented "Listener"—someone who can hear supernatural sounds and voices. Pressed into ghost-hunting by her mother, she was unjustly made the scapegoat for a tragedy that killed four colleagues at her first agency, forcing her to leave her northern hometown. Cameron Chapman as Anthony Lockwood, proprietor of Lockwood & Co., London's newest psychic investigations agency and the only one with no adult supervisors. Orphaned and almost alone in the world, he is the owner of 35 Portland Row, the Lockwood family residence, which serves as the agency’s office and home to its three members. Ali Hadji-Heshmati as George Karim, Lockwood's friend and the agency's head of research. Shy but highly intelligent, he was fired from the prestigious Fittes agency for asking too many questions about "the Problem". An excellent cook, he also serves as unofficial head chef at Portland Row. ===Recurring=== Ivanno Jeremiah as Inspector Montagu Barnes, an official at the Department for Psychical Research and Control (DEPRAC), which regulates agency work and responds to paranormal incidents Jack Bandeira as Quill Kipps, the top agent at Fittes, charged with solving its most dangerous cases, and a longtime rival of Lockwood's Rhianna Dorris as Kat Godwin, a member of Kipps's elite team and effectively his second-in-command Paddy Holland as Bobby Vernon, a young researcher on Kipps's team whose grasp of the Problem is almost as good as George's Rico Vina as Ned Shaw, the fourth member of Kipps's team Bronwyn James as Sergeant Wade, Barnes's hardline deputy Louise Brealey as Pamela Joplin, a driven researcher at Sweet Dreams Excavations whose job is to identify potentially haunted gravesites ===Guest=== Lily Newmark as Norrie White, Lucy's best friend and a colleague at her first agency, who is "ghost-locked"—trapped in a coma—after the tragedy Andrew Woodall as Jacobs, the alcoholic proprietor of Jacobs & Co., Lucy's first agency Sandra Huggett as Mrs Carlyle, Lucy's uncaring mother Ishtar Currie-Wilson as Annabel Ward, a British actress who disappeared in the 1980s Sharon Morgan as Mrs Hope, the owner of the house Lucy and Lockwood set alight Saverio Buono as Hugo Blake, an actor suspected of Annabel's murder Nigel Planer as Sir John Fairfax, an industrialist who has made millions from the global demand for iron as a means of repelling ghosts Lily Nichol as Ellie, Fairfax's assistant, a former agent Morven Christie as Penelope Fittes, enigmatic head of the Fittes agency and the public face of Britain's ghost-hunting effort Jeff Rawle as Sebastian Saunders, Joplin’s business partner in Sweet Dreams Excavations Saskia Axten as Genevieve, a Sensitive employed by Sweet Dreams Michael Clarke as the Skull, a ghost contained in a secure jar that George stole from the Fittes agency, now kept at Portland Row Amanda Abbington as Marissa Fittes, the late founder of the Fittes agency and Britain’s most famous ghost hunter. Mother of Penelope Hayley Konadu as Florence Bonnard/Flo Bones, a mudlark and friend of Lockwood's who makes a living illegally selling haunted relics or "sources" Ben Crompton as Julius Winkman, a violent and lawless relic dealer involved in the black market trade of sources, who masquerades as an antique dealer Alice Lowe as Adelaide Winkman, Julius's wife and partner in crime Conall Turner as Leopold, the Winkmans' son Jethro Skinner as Jack Carver, a relic man involved in the theft of the Bone Glass Luke Treadaway as The Golden Blade, a dangerous antagonist with a gold-bladed sword whose allegiance and motives are unclear Paul Thornley as Cutter, an undercover DEPRAC officer infiltrating the Winkmans' operation ==Episodes== == Production == === Development === In 2017 it was announced that Nira Park and Rachael Prior had optioned the rights to Jonathan Stroud's Lockwood & Co. book series while at Big Talk Productions. In 2019 they left Big Talk to set up Complete Fiction Pictures and produced the TV series under their new banner. On 19 May 2020 it was announced that Complete Fiction was working with Netflix to develop the series, and Joe Cornish was set to helm and executive produce the series. In December 2020, Netflix officially gave an eight-episode series order to Lockwood & Co. Cornish served as lead writer and director. Park, Prior, and Cornish served as executive producers. William McGregor was also involved in directing several episodes. Ed Hime, Kara Smith, and Joy Wilkinson were the series' writers. === Filming === Filming began on 5 July 2021 in London. A house on Claremont Square in Islington was chosen for the exterior shots of 35 Portland Row, with the interiors of the house constructed as sets at Ealing Studios. Filming occurred at the Kensal Green Cemetery in late October 2021. Scenes at haunted "Combe Carey Hall" for episode 3 were shot at Mentmore Towers in Buckinghamshire and the part of the series set in Lucy's unidentified hometown was filmed in Chipping Campden in Gloucestershire. The series wrapped on 15 March 2022. ===Music=== Cornish chose to include in the series songs relying on early goth rock from the repertoire of Bauhaus, the Cure, Siouxsie and the Banshees and This Mortal Coil. Journalist Matthew Mahler noted: "The score seems [...] to create a truly supernatural aural palette." Many of the bands are referenced in posters in characters' rooms. Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 78 out of 100 based on 6 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Leila Latif of The Guardian wrote: "Lockwood and Co is a delight, with a level of intelligence and respect for its source material, its characters and its audience." Writing in Empire magazine, Boyd Hilton said: "Forget the YA label; this is an addictive, sophisticated supernatural thriller which will keep cynical old duffers entertained throughout." Labeling it as one of Variety's Best Netflix Shows of 2023, Kate Arthur declared: "Well-acted, atmospheric, inventive and creepy, 'Lockwood & Co.' effectively set up a world ripe for more seasons." === Audience viewership === Lockwood & Co. featured in the Netflix global top 10s for 3 weeks between 22 January and 12 February, picking up 79.91 million hours. It reached Netflix's Global Top #1 Show spot in its second week on the platform, holding the number one spot in 18 countries. Over the first half of 2023, the show ranked fourth among Netflix UK's original shows, with 113 million hours viewed, and 80th globally among all Netflix titles. === Awards and nominations === == Cancellation == On May 12, 2023, Jonathan Stroud and Complete Fiction Picture announced that the series had been cancelled. Variety added that the "viewing numbers didn't meet the threshold to greenlight a second season". Fans expressed their disappointment on social media, and some publications criticized Netflix's habit of prematurely cancelling series, especially young adult-related and fantasy-related ones.
[ "Deadline Hollywood", "Jeff Rawle", "BadBadNotGood", "Sharon Morgan", "Lockwood & Co.", "mudlark", "Ed Hime", "Bauhaus (band)", "Adventure (genre)", "The Screaming Staircase", "Kensal Green Cemetery", "Rotten Tomatoes", "Jonathan Stroud", "The Hollywood Reporter", "Thriller (genre)", "Ivanno Jeremiah", "Joe Cornish", "Jack Bandeira", "Ruby Stokes", "Siouxsie and the Banshees", "Bronwyn James", "Detective fiction", "Louise Brealey", "Luke Treadaway", "Joy Wilkinson", "Islington", "YouTube", "Variety (magazine)", "review aggregator", "Amanda Abbington", "Ben Crompton", "Paul Thornley (actor)", "TheWrap", "Nira Park", "Backstage (magazine)", "Claremont Square", "National Film Awards UK", "The Whispering Skull (novel)", "Empire (magazine)", "Drama (film and television)", "The Guardian", "William McGregor (director)", "Netflix", "IndieWire", "The Flight (band)", "Nigel Planer", "This Mortal Coil", "London", "National Geographic", "Metacritic", "Mentmore Towers", "Action (genre)", "Catherine Morshead", "Alice Lowe", "goth rock", "the Cure", "Morven Christie", "Supernatural fiction", "Lily Newmark", "Supernatural horror", "Sandra Huggett", "Ealing Studios", "The Cinemaholic", "Chipping Campden", "Forbes" ]
69,404,893
Category:Irish Ashkenazi Jews
[]
69,404,901
Dominican holidays
Dominican holidays may refer to: Public holidays in Dominica Public holidays in the Dominican Republic
[ "Public holidays in Dominica", "Public holidays in the Dominican Republic" ]
69,404,903
Category:Ashkenazi Jewish culture in Ireland
This category includes articles related to the culture and history of the Ashkenazi Jews in Ireland.
[ "Ashkenazi Jews", "Ireland" ]
69,404,912
Template:Fire lookout towers in New York
[ "Dickinson Hill Fire Tower", "Goodnow Mountain", "Woodhull Mountain (Herkimer County, New York)", "Stillwater Mountain", "Crane Mountain (New York)", "Bald Mountain (Lewis County, New York)", "Kempshall Mountain", "Cathead Mountain", "Gallis Hill", "Mount Irvine (New York)", "Morgan Hill (New York)", "Beacon Mountain", "Hamilton Mountain (Hamilton County, New York)", "Owls Head Mountain Forest Fire Observation Station", "Castor Hill", "St. Regis Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Fort Noble Mountain", "Jackie Jones Mountain", "Red Hill Fire Observation Station", "Whiteface Mountain", "Buck Mountain (Long Lake, New York)", "Stissing Mountain", "Prospect Mountain (Warren County, New York)", "Adirondack Mountains", "Sproul Hill", "Palmer Hill (Clinton County, New York)", "Overlook Mountain", "Shawangunk Ridge", "Penn Mountain", "Hurricane Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Snowy Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Cornell Hill", "Bald Mountain (Herkimer County, New York)", "Hadley Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Number Four Fire Tower", "Alma Hill", "Moose River Mountain", "Gore Mountain (New York)", "Pharaoh Mountain", "Sterling Mountain Fire Observation Tower and Observer's Cabin", "Clove Mountain", "Swede Mountain", "Lyon Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Mount Electra (New York)", "Jersey Hill", "Boreas Mountain (New York)", "Chapin Hill", "Science Hill (New York)", "New York (state)", "Mount Nimham", "Makomis Mountain", "Rock Rift Fire Observation Tower", "Dairy Hill", "Wakely Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Pillsbury Mountain Forest Fire Observation Station", "Berry Hill (New York)", "Kane Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Catamount Mountain", "Mount Morris (New York)", "Ingraham Hill", "Page Pond Hill", "Dun Brook Mountain", "Berlin Mountain", "Hartzfelt Mountain", "Black Mountain (Washington County, New York)", "Utsayantha Mountain", "Ampersand Mountain", "Summit Fire Tower", "Hooker Mountain", "Beebe Hill State Forest", "Azure Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Catskill Mountains", "Morrow Mountain (New York)", "Mount Tremper Fire Observation Station", "Vanderwhacker Mountain", "McCarty Hill", "Meenahga Mountain", "Twadell Mountain", "Fingerboard Mountain", "Mount Rutsen", "Washburn Mountain", "Cathedral Rock (New York)", "Gomer Hill", "Hunter Mountain Fire Tower", "Debar Mountain", "Bramley Mountain", "T Lake Mountain", "West Mountain (Hamilton County, New York)", "Ohmer Mountain", "Slide Mountain (Ulster County, New York)", "Whites Hill (New York)", "Mount Colfax", "Tomany Mountain", "Salmon Lake Mountain", "Leonard Hill (New York)", "Petersburg Mountain", "Mount Adams Fire Observation Station", "Spruce Mountain (New York)", "Arab Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Mount Tuscarora", "Balsam Lake Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Loon Lake Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Belfry Mountain", "Poke-O-Moonshine Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Blue Mountain Fire Observation Station", "Bear Mountain (Hudson Highlands)" ]
69,404,922
Statue of Mariano Otero
A statue of Mariano Otero is installed along the Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres, in Centro, Guadalajara, in the Mexican state of Jalisco.
[ "Jalisco", "Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres", "Guadalajara", "Centro, Guadalajara" ]
69,404,946
Chung Yuet Palace
Chung Yuet Palace () is a residential skyscraper complex located in Luzhu District, Taoyuan City, Taiwan. The complex comprises two skyscraper buildings completed in 2006, with a height of that comprise 29 floors above ground, as well as 3 basement levels. The complex contains 188 apartment units. As of December 2021, they are the tallest buildings in Luzhu District and 6th tallest in Taoyuan City. Facilities of the condominium include two swimming pools, sauna rooms, gymnasiums, as well as entertainment and leisure facilities, such as billiard rooms, badminton and squash courts, and yoga rooms.
[ "Taiwan", "List of tallest buildings in Taoyuan City", "List of tallest buildings in Taiwan", "ChungYuet Royal Landmark", "skyscraper", "Emporis", "residential", "Taoyuan City", "Luzhu District, Taoyuan", "Residential" ]
69,404,972
Category:Swedish Ashkenazi Jews
[]
69,404,989
Category:Ashkenazi Jewish culture in Sweden
This category includes articles related to the culture and history of the Ashkenazi Jews in Sweden.
[ "Sweden", "Ashkenazi Jews" ]
69,404,990
Statue of María Izquierdo
A statue of María Izquierdo is installed along the Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres, in Centro, Guadalajara, in the Mexican state of Jalisco.
[ "María Izquierdo (artist)", "Guadalajara", "Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres", "Jalisco", "Centro, Guadalajara" ]
69,405,010
James and Jamesy
James and Jamesy are a Canadian clown duo, created by Aaron Malkin and Alastair Knowles with director David MacMurray Smith. Based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, they produce theatrical and other clown performances, blending theatre, physical comedy and dance, which typically include significant audience participation, breaking of the 4th wall and a 5 week run Off Broadway at New York's SoHo Playhouse in 2018. Alastair's character (aka. Jamesy), was improvised as part of the group work, and Malkin's character (James) was formed in reaction to, and to act as interlocutor for Jamesy. the show mixes "Monty Python, Mr. Bean and Dr. Seuss". The show has since become a Christmas tradition, and the duo have toured and performed it on the west coast every December since (with the exception of 2020, due to COVID-19 restrictions). As of 2021, the 23 city Christmas tour includes Vancouver, Seattle and Edmonton. === James & Jamesy in the Dark === Debuted in May 2014, the work starts with an unlit stage. Two strangers meet, each with a chair, and both attempting to place the chair on stage and then leave - and instead, they encounter each other and proceed from there. Trying to describe what goes on is "nearly impossible" The show has won numerous accolades and has been extremely well received by critics, with CBC reviewer Iris Yudai calling James and Jamesy "One of the most popular Fringe duos ever" === High Tea === Performed since at least 2015. The audience acts as a third character, Malkin describes the show as "having no fourth wall". === 2 for Tea === Performed in sold out performances at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2017.) and Dandelion, and Knowles' performance in INK. == Awards == Canadian Comedy Awards - Live/Best Live Ensemble, 2016 22 time "Best of Fest" winners on the International Comedy Circuit as of 2021 3 times Impresario Award winners at the London Fringe Theatre Festival (Ontario)
[ "Edinburgh Festival Fringe", "New York City", "London Fringe Theatre Festival (Ontario)", "SoHo Playhouse", "British Columbia", "Vancouver" ]
69,405,016
Javier Contreras (tennis)
Javier Contreras Rodríguez (born 27 March 1960) is a Mexican former professional tennis player. He now coaches tennis in Texas. Born in Mexico City, Contreras is the son of former Davis Cup player and team captain "Pancho" Contreras. Contreras played on the international tour in the 1980s, reaching a best singles ranking of 298. He represented the Mexico Davis Cup team in a 1984 tie against Chile in Santiago, where he lost his reverse singles rubber to Pedro Rebolledo. His best result on tour was a runner-up finish to Tim Wilkison at the 1984 San Luis Potosí Challenger. His daughter Fernanda Contreras is a professional tennis player. ==ATP Challenger Tour finals== ===Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)=== | |}
[ "List of Mexico Davis Cup team representatives", "Mexico Davis Cup team", "Davis Cup", "Tim Wilkison", "Mexico City", "Pedro Rebolledo", "San Luis Potosí", "tennis", "Francisco Contreras (tennis)", "Fernanda Contreras", "El Universal (Mexico City)" ]
69,405,023
Public holidays in the Congo
Public holidays in the Congo could refer to: Public holidays in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Public holidays in the Republic of the Congo
[ "Public holidays in the Democratic Republic of the Congo", "Public holidays in the Republic of the Congo" ]
69,405,024
Category:Bundism in Europe
[]
69,405,042
Stephen Wood (ice hockey)
Stephen Wood (born August 18, 1981) is an American ice hockey coach and former defenseman who was an All-American for Providence. He took a more prominent role as a sophomore, leading the Friars' defense in scoring for three consecutive seasons. Unfortunately, the team was only marginally successful during this period. After finishing with a sub-.500 record in 2002, Wood helped Providence keep their heads above water as an upperclassmen but only just. In his final three years, the Friars went 1–6 in playoff games, losing the conference quarterfinals each season. Despite the middling results, Wood was well-regarded and named an All-American as a senior. After graduating with a degree in business management, he signed a professional contract with the Philadelphia Flyers and began in their minor league system. He split his first full season between the AHL and ECHL, finishing the year with the Trenton Titans and helping the club win the Kelly Cup. After a second divided season, Wood began to move around and played for four different teams over a two year period. In 2008 he travelled to Europe and played two more years before retiring. Wood's second career began shortly thereafter when he started working as an account executive for Hitachi Data Systems. After five years he joined Dell Technologies as a global account manager. In 2017, Wood left the accounting world and founded his own company, Beyond the Ice. The business provides a 7-week virtual hockey school for youth players, focusing on character building and mental aspects of the game. ==Career statistics== ===Regular season and playoffs=== ==Awards and honors==
[ "Point (ice hockey)", "Sheffield Steelers", "2005–06 AHL season", "Dell Technologies", "Playoffs", "2004–05 ECHL season", "Philadelphia Flyers", "Elite Ice Hockey League", "Hitachi Data Systems", "2001–02 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "2002–03 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Peoria Rivermen (AHL)", "2000–01 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Massachusetts", "Assist (ice hockey)", "2001 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament", "Cambridge, Massachusetts", "Hockey East", "2009–10 EIHL season", "2007–08 ECHL season", "Europe", "Regular season", "Trenton Titans", "Philadelphia Phantoms", "2006–07 ECHL season", "defenseman", "Trenton Devils", "Herning Blue Fox", "ECHL", "Goal (ice hockey)", "Bridgeport Sound Tigers", "Alaska Aces (ECHL)", "2003–04 AHL season", "2008–09 AL-Bank Ligaen season", "Esbjerg Energy", "Providence Friars men's ice hockey", "American Hockey Coaches Association", "Kelly Cup", "List of All-Hockey East Teams", "2001 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament", "American Hockey League", "business management", "2005–06 ECHL season", "2007–08 AHL season", "List of Division I AHCA All-American Teams", "2003–04 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season", "Defenseman", "2006–07 AHL season", "Season (sports)", "Metal Ligaen", "2004–05 AHL season", "Penalty (ice hockey)" ]
69,405,069
Category:Bundism in North America
[]
69,405,076
2021–22 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team
The 2021–22 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team represented the University of South Dakota in the 2021–22 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Coyotes, led by fourth-year head coach Todd Lee, played their home games at the Sanford Coyote Sports Center in Vermillion, South Dakota as members of the Summit League. They finished the season 19–12, 11–7 in Summit League play to finish in fifth place. They defeated Kansas City in the quarterfinals of the Summit League tournament before losing to South Dakota State in the semifinals. On March 10, 2022, the school fired head coach Todd Lee after four years. On March 15, the school named Utah State assistant Eric Peterson the team's new head coach. ==Previous season== In a season limited due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the Coyotes finished the 2020–21 season 14–11, 11–4 in Summit League play to finish in second place. As the No. 2 seed in the Summit League tournament, they defeated Western Illinois in the quarterfinals, before falling to North Dakota State in the semifinals. == Roster == ==Schedule and results== |- !colspan=12 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=12 style=| Non-conference regular season |- !colspan=12 style=| Summit League regular season |- !colspan=9 style=|Summit League tournament Sources
[ "Athens", "ESPN+", "2021–22 Tennessee State Tigers basketball team", "Midco", "Kansas City, Missouri", "2021–22 Denver Pioneers men's basketball team", "Sioux Falls, South Dakota", "Eric Peterson (basketball)", "COVID-19 pandemic", "Springfield, Nebraska", "2021–22 Summit League men's basketball season", "Mesa, Arizona", "Saint Paul, Minnesota", "Grand Forks, North Dakota", "Todd Lee", "Central Time Zone", "2020–21 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "2020–21 South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball team", "2021–22 Southern Jaguars basketball team", "2021–22 St. Thomas (Minnesota) Tommies men's basketball team", "2021–22 Drake Bulldogs men's basketball team", "Greece", "WDAY-TV", "2021–22 Nebraska Cornhuskers men's basketball team", "Papillion, Nebraska", "2021–22 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks men's basketball team", "2020–21 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team", "2021 Summit League men's basketball tournament", "2021–22 San Jose State Spartans men's basketball team", "2021–22 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team", "Provident Credit Union Event Center", "Bank of Colorado Arena", "Fargo, North Dakota", "Vermillion, South Dakota", "Scheels Center", "Sydney", "COVID-19 pandemic in the United States", "Chandler, Arizona", "2021–22 Kansas City Roos men's basketball team", "New Zealand", "Rapid City, South Dakota", "Summit League", "2021–22 NCAA Division I men's basketball season", "Big Ten Network", "2021–22 North Dakota Fighting Hawks men's basketball team", "Tulsa, Oklahoma", "2021–22 Omaha Mavericks men's basketball team", "Greeley, Colorado", "Denny Sanford Premier Center", "AP Poll", "2020–21 North Dakota State Bison men's basketball team", "Lincoln, Nebraska", "2021–22 Western Illinois Leathernecks men's basketball team", "Frost Arena", "2021–22 Oral Roberts Golden Eagles men's basketball team", "Baxter Arena", "Sanford Pentagon", "Kearney, Nebraska", "Montenegro", "Western Hall", "Auckland", "Sanford Coyote Sports Center", "Pinnacle Bank Arena", "Cheyenne, Wyoming", "San Jose, California", "Swinney Recreation Center", "University of South Dakota", "Macomb, Illinois", "2022 Summit League men's basketball tournament", "2021–22 Utah State Aggies men's basketball team", "Mount Vernon, Iowa", "Brookings, South Dakota", "Des Moines, Iowa", "Mabee Center", "2021–22 Air Force Falcons men's basketball team", "Australia", "Podgorica", "Mankato, Minnesota", "Betty Engelstad Sioux Center", "Simpson College", "2021–22 South Dakota State Jackrabbits men's basketball team", "2021–22 Bellarmine Knights men's basketball team", "Waldorf University", "Mediacom", "Knapp Center", "Presentation College, South Dakota", "Denver", "2021–22 Northern Colorado Bears men's basketball team", "Omaha, Nebraska" ]
69,405,081
Muaaz Al-Quoz
{{Infobox football biography | name = Muaaz Al-Quoe | image = | caption = | fullname = Muaaz Abdelraheem Gesmallah Abdelrahman | birth_place = Sudan | birth_date =
[ "Al Ahli SC (Khartoum)", "Hay Al-Arab SC", "Sudan national football team", "Al-Nojoom SC (Ajdabiya)", "Al-Nejm Alreefy SC (Misrata)", "Alamal SC Atbara", "FIFA", "El-Hilal SC El-Obeid", "Forward (association football)", "Haidoub SC (Al-Nehoud)", "Al Khartoum SC", "Khartoum NC" ]
69,405,114
Harriet MacMillan
Harriet Louise MacMillan is a Canadian pediatrician, psychiatrist and scientist. As a Distinguished University Professor at McMaster University, she was also elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. ==Early life and education== MacMillan was born in Baltimore, Maryland, to Canadian parents but was raised in Hamilton, Ontario. She was born into a physician family as both her grandfather and father were medical doctors. Her grandfather was a family physician who was heavily involved with the West Lincoln Memorial Hospital while her father Angus MacMillan co-founded McMaster University's Department of Pediatrics. She completed her Master of Science degree in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at McMaster University before enrolling at Queen's University for her medical degree. Following this, she completed her residency in psychiatry and pediatrics at SickKids Hospital. ==Career== Following her residency, MacMillan accepted a visiting fellowship at Harvard Medical School before returning to McMaster as a faculty member in 1992. As an assistant professor of psychiatry and pediatrics in the faculty of health sciences at McMaster University, MacMillan also collaborated with her father to study aboriginal health care. While serving in these dual roles, MacMillan received a grant from the Ontario Women's Health Council to conduct cross-province research including hospital emergency departments, family physician's offices, obstetrics and gynecology clinics, community health centers, and midwifery practices, to discover how best to identify woman abuse in health settings. Upon stepping down as director, MacMillan was appointed the Endowed David R. (Dan) Offord Chair in Child Studies and continued her research into incidence, control, and prevention of violence against women and children. In 2010, MacMillan was appointed director of the newly established Centre for Research Development in Gender, Mental Health and Violence Across the Lifespan through funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). While serving in this role, she also oversaw the Preventing Violence Across the Lifespan (PreVAiL) Research Network to develop cross-Canada formal guidance and education materials to help health professionals better support victims of violence. As a result of her career "in leading research in the prevention of, and response to, family violence," MacMillan was honoured as a member of the Order of Canada in 2017. She was also conferred the title of Distinguished University Professor by McMaster University for conducting research that has "led to a better understanding of the impact of exposure to violence and its link to mental health outcomes and has spurred international prevention efforts." In February 2020, MacMillan co-developed an online resource called the Violence Evidence Guidance Action (VEGA) project which aimed at educating health care and social service providers and students across Canada in recognizing and responding to family violence. During the COVID-19 pandemic, MacMillan helped develop a provincewide survey to gather data on how families are coping with the pandemic. She was also elected a fellow of two national honor societies; the Royal Society of Canada and Canadian Academy of Health Sciences.
[ "Queen's University at Kingston", "Harvard Medical School", "medical degree", "COVID-19 pandemic", "Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada", "Master of Science", "Hamilton, Ontario", "Order of Canada", "residency (medicine)", "Canadian Academy of Health Sciences", "assistant professor", "McMaster University", "Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto)", "Canadian Institutes of Health Research", "Royal Society of Canada", "Angus MacMillan (pediatrician)", "McMaster Children's Hospital", "Learned society", "Brantford Expositor" ]
69,405,115
Taichung LNG Terminal
The Taichung LNG Terminal () is a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal at Port of Taichung, Wuqi District, Taichung, Taiwan. ==History== The terminal was inaugurated on 16 July 2009 by CPC Corporation as the second LNG terminal in Taiwan. On 24 August 2020, Port of Taichung operator Taiwan International Ports Corporation signed an agreement with CPC Corporation to lease the area next to west wharf number 11 and 12 of the port for the expansion of Taichung LNG Terminal. ==Technical specifications== The terminal supplies vaporized LNG to Tatan Power Plant in Guanyin District, Taoyuan City via subsea gas pipeline.
[ "Taiwan", "Taiwan International Ports Corporation", "Guanyin District", "Port of Taichung", "Taichung", "Tatan Power Plant", "CPC Corporation", "Wuqi District", "List of LNG terminals", "Taoyuan, Taiwan", "liquefied natural gas", "Pipeline transport" ]
69,405,122
Taffel
Taffel is a Finnish brand of potato chips produced by Orkla Confectionery & Snacks Finland. Taffel potato chips are produced in Åland, and it was the first product of the Orkla factory. The Taffel brand also includes dipping sauces, French fries, popcorn and nut mixes. According to research by Markkinointi & Mainonta magazine and Taloustutkimus, Taffel was Finland's most valued brand of potato chips in 2015. ==History== Ab Chips Oy Ltd was founded in 1969. In 1973 the factory employed 31 people working on Taffel. Originally a bag of Taffel chips weighed 75 grams. Aluminium bags were used in the factory. (puffed fried cheese snacks) were introduced in the 1970s. In 1987, De Danske Spritfabrikker, Taffel's second-largest owner, planned to sell its shares to Fazer, which was Taffel's largest owner. ended up selling its shares to the Ålandians. In 1991 the Norwegian company Orkla ASA bought a tenth of the company. In 1995 Taffel brought quality chips called ('the manor's chips') onto the market. In 2000 Ab Chips Oy Ltd and Orkla founded Scandinavian Snack Company together. The company is the largest potato chips producer in the Nordic countries: it produces 90,000 tons of snacks per year. In 2005 Orkla announced it would buy all of the company's stock. In 2016 Orkla announced corporate negotiations concerning its entire Åland factory and was considering closing the Taffel factory down. The company later decided to continue production in Åland. In 2019 the factory won Orkla's internal development award.
[ "dipping sauce", "Fazer", "Markkinointi & Mainonta", "Taloustutkimus", "Norway", "Chips (company)", "Åland", "Nordic countries", "popcorn", "De Danske Spritfabrikker", "Finland", "Orkla ASA", "potato chips" ]
69,405,133
Lisa Mosconi
Lisa Mosconi is an Italian American neuroscientist, educator, and author known for her books The Menopause Brain, The XX Brain and Brain Food. She is the director of the Alzheimer's Prevention Program and the Women’s Brain Initiative, both at Weill Cornell Medicine / NewYork-Presbyterian where she is an Associate Professor of Neuroscience in Neurology and Radiology. Mosconi is currently serving as Program Director at Wellcome Leap, a global human health research organization. ==Early life and education== Mosconi was born in Florence, Italy and both of her parents are nuclear physicists. There is a history of Alzheimer's disease in her family which affected her grandmother and her grandmother's two sisters. ==Research== Her research focuses on the early detection of Alzheimer’s disease in at-risk individuals, women in particular. This is the topic of her book The Menopause Brain where she explains that menopause is a neurological as well as hormonal process; she believes in reframing brain health as a vital, yet overlooked component of women’s health. She is a member of the AARP brain health council and is on the Aspen Brain Institute Scientific Advisory Council. == Media and publishing == Mosconi's TED Talk on how menopause affects the brain has been viewed over four million times, and in 2024 she spoke at the inaugural Presidential Women’s Health Research Conference at the White House, which highlighted the significant funding and research disparities in women’s health. Her books The Menopause Brain and The XX Brain are New York Times bestsellers. Her book Brain Food discusses which foods are more beneficial for brain health, and looks at research which shows that a poor diet and a lack of hydration can be damaging to the brain especially as it gets older.
[ "NewYork-Presbyterian", "Alzheimer's disease", "Women's health", "Menopause", "TED (conference)", "The New York Times Best Seller list", "Clinical neuroscience", "PhD", "National Institutes of Health", "New York University Grossman School of Medicine", "AARP", "Weill Cornell Medicine", "University of Florence" ]
69,405,152
Zographetus dzonguensis
Zographetus dzonguensis, the chocolate-bordered flitter, is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae. Z. dzonguensis was named after the area it was found in (Dzongu). ==Distribution== Species was described from Upper Dzongu, North Sikkim District, Sikkim, India.
[ "Sikkim", "Hesperiidae", "India", "butterfly" ]
69,405,157
File:Lonestar - Mr Mom (single cover).jpeg
==Summary== ==Licensing==
[]