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69,405,875 |
Category:Orthodox rabbis in Mandatory Palestine
|
[] |
|
69,405,882 |
Rakujitsu no Pathos
|
====Tasogare no Ethos====
|
[
"Shiori's Diary",
"Akita Shoten",
"manga",
"Ethos",
"Mikazuki ga Waratteru",
"Seinen manga",
"tankōbon",
"Anime News Network",
"Pathos",
"Kono Manga ga Sugoi!",
"Takarajimasha",
"Romance comics",
"Comic Natalie",
"Twilight",
"MOS:A&M",
"Futari no Ouchi",
"Spinoff (media)"
] |
69,405,888 |
Category:2022 in South Korean music
|
[] |
|
69,405,893 |
File:Seal of Kalamazoo, Michigan.svg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,405,898 |
Category:2022 music awards
|
[] |
|
69,405,899 |
File:Lei'd in Hawaii Rehearsal.jpg
|
== Summary ==
|
[] |
69,405,906 |
Jansenia rugosiceps
|
Jansenia rugosiceps is a species of tiger beetle found in southern India. An examination of pygidial gland chemical defenses found that the species does not produce significant benzaldehyde unlike many other tiger beetle species.
|
[
"tiger beetle",
"Maximilien Chaudoir"
] |
69,405,912 |
Category:Members of the Atlanta City Council
|
[] |
|
69,405,924 |
Om Tilla
|
Om Tilla (About Tilla) is a Norwegian drama film from 1963 directed by Arne Skouen. Skouen wrote the screenplay, which was based on his 1959 novel Bare om barn. It contained a series of articles from the newspaper Verdens Gang, in which Skouen pointed out that children with intellectual disabilities and children with behavioral difficulties did not receive sufficient financial support or professional help.
==Plot==
The child psychologist Ivar visits Tilla's mother, Maria, one day at the Botanical Garden in Oslo. Ivar had Tilla under observation a few months earlier, but Maria did not return with her daughter. The child psychologist manages to persuade Maria to come with Tilla to the children's psychiatric clinic so that they can start treating her. At the clinic, they meet the chief physician Mimi Backer. Tilla has not spoken in a year and a half. In the observation room at the clinic, the first small glimmer of light falls on the mystery. There, the girl builds up her secret world through toys she chooses to express herself.
==Cast==
Eva Henning as Maria
Toralv Maurstad as Ivar
Wenche Foss as Mimi Backer, the chief physician
Synne Skouen as Tilla, Maria's daughter
Egil Lorck as Bernhard, a gardener
Tore Foss as Haugen, the ship inspector
Erik Gløersen as Terje
Johannes Eckhoff as the school psychologist
Pål Virik as a teenager
Roy Bjørnstad as a gardener
Kai Remlov as a teenager
Bonne Gauguin
|
[
"Kai Remlov",
"Norway",
"Eva Henning",
"Arne Skouen",
"Roy Bjørnstad",
"Synne Skouen",
"Egil Lorck",
"Bonne Gauguin",
"Johannes Eckhoff",
"Verdens Gang",
"intellectual disabilities",
"University Botanical Garden (Oslo)",
"Swedish Film Database",
"Tore Foss",
"Ragnar Sørensen",
"Toralv Maurstad",
"Wenche Foss",
"Sølve Kern",
"Gunnar Sønstevold",
"National Library of Norway"
] |
69,405,935 |
File:Rakujitsu no Pathos 1.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"Akita Shoten",
"Fair use"
] |
69,405,946 |
Category:Swiss Sephardi Jews
|
[] |
|
69,405,960 |
1492 in Spain
|
Events of the year 1492 in Spain included the end of the Reconquista with the fall of Granada, the Jewish Diaspora of Spain due to the Alhambra Decree, and the start of Columbus' first voyage.
It is considered the of the history of Spain.
==Incumbents==
Monarch(s):
the Catholic Monarchs: King Ferdinand II, Queen Isabella I
John III of Navarre, Catherine of Navarre
==Events==
2nd January: The Fall of Granada, the last remnant of Al-Andalus.
End Of The Reconquista
Expulsion of Jews from Spain
Columbus' first voyage
11th August: Spanish cardinal Rodrigo de Borja is elected Pope Alexander VI
18th August: by Antonio de Nebrija, first grammar of a modern European language
In the kingdom of Navarre, Catherine of Navarre wins the civil war.
Castilian troops starts the conquest of the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands.
Possible eruption of volcano Teide in Tenerife as noted by Columbus' log.
The ceiling of the Aljafería Palace in Zaragoza is finished.
The novel by Diego de San Pedro is printed in Seville.
|
[
"Canary Islands",
"Teide",
"Catholic Monarchs",
"Granada War",
"Antonio de Nebrija",
"Tenerife",
"annus mirabilis",
"Spanish Inquisition",
"Voyages of Christopher Columbus",
"Ferdinand II of Aragon",
"Gramática de la lengua castellana",
"Pope Alexander VI",
"Cárcel de amor",
"Catherine of Navarre",
"Diego de San Pedro",
"La Palma",
"Exploration of North America",
"Alhambra Decree",
"Expulsion of Jews from Spain",
"kingdom of Navarre",
"John III of Navarre",
"Reconquista",
"Aljafería",
"Al-Andalus",
"El Confidencial",
"Isabella I of Castille"
] |
69,405,962 |
Beeches Pit
|
Beeches Pit is an archaeological site in Suffolk, England, dated to around . It contains palaeoenvironmental remains, and is particularly notable because it provides evidence of the human use of fire, In addition, knapping debris and Acheulean hand axes have been found. It is one of the richest sites in England for evidence of human activity during that period,
The pit evidences a rich fauna including mollusks, wood mice, fallow deer, and other animals, who lived in a water-rich environment in a woodland, with human occupation taking place at a time when there were higher temperatures in the summer and more rainfall than today.
The fires at Beeches pit were large, and were kept going for long periods of time. While one researcher suggested this might evidence that the humans occupying the site could not kindle any fire independently, and thus had to keep it going constantly, others see that as evidence of the place being a kind of home base, where those who remained in the camp while others left kept large fires for "warmth, safety and entertainment", wood being plentiful.
|
[
"Acheulean",
"hand axe",
"thermoluminescence dating",
"Marine Isotope Stage 11",
"British Geological Survey",
"fallow deer",
"List of sites and monuments in Kenya",
"mollusk",
"wood mice",
"flint",
"Swanscombe Heritage Park",
"knapping",
"Sydney Barber Josiah Skertchly",
"Amino-acid racemase",
"Suffolk",
"John Gowlett",
"Thetford Forest"
] |
69,405,973 |
Charles M. Barras
|
Charles M. Barras ( – ) was an American actor and playwright best known for writing the book inspiring the hit musical play The Black Crook.
Early in his life, Barras trained as a carpenter and served for three years in the US Navy. In 1860, he married danseuse and soubrette Sallie St. Clair. In 1861, he was manager of Pike's Opera House in Cincinnati, Ohio, when he earned acclaim for his performance of the title character in an adaptation of Molière's The Imaginary Invalid.
Barras wrote The Black Crook (1866) as a standard melodrama, but the piece was transformed by producers Jarrett & Palmer, under an agreement with theatre manager William Wheatley, into a musical extravaganza. The spectacular success of The Black Crook earned Barras a fortune of some $250,000 (about $5,000,000 today).
Barras built a country house on the Mianus River in Cos Cob, Connecticut, near its railroad station and was a weekly train passenger. On March 31, 1873, while the train was stopped on a trestle bridge, Barras jumped from the train, but instead of landing on the bridge, he fell through it to the rocks below and died.
|
[
"extravaganza",
"Mianus River",
"The Black Crook",
"melodrama",
"Musical theatre",
"United States Navy",
"Cincinnati",
"Pike's Opera House (Cincinnati)",
"Cos Cob, Connecticut",
"John Fiske (philosopher)",
"James Grant Wilson",
"Jarrett & Palmer",
"playwright",
"Ballet dancer",
"trestle bridge",
"Molière",
"William Wheatley",
"soubrette",
"Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography",
"The Imaginary Invalid"
] |
69,405,976 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Nonlinear rescaling
|
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. ♠PMC♠ (talk) 05:32, 8 December 2021 (UTC)
===:Nonlinear rescaling===
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Another mathematics "topic" that is just two common words used together in different contexts. User:力 (powera, π, ν) 04:33, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mathematics-related deletion discussions. User:力 (powera, π, ν) 04:33, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete. Unlike spatial complexity, I think there is a real idea here, but a small, old, and obvious one: sometimes in optimization problems, applying a nonlinear function can transform the problem into something more obviously solvable. A standard example is that certain quadratic optimization problems can be transformed into linear ones by mapping vectors into higher-dimensional spaces using the squared norm or other quadratic combinations of coordinates as the extra dimensions. However, this would need to be an entirely different article, not focusing on Polyak's old wine in new bottles, so WP:TNT still applies. —David Eppstein (talk) 08:43, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep, this is a specific idea and passes WP:GNG based on the sources in the article. SailingInABathTub (talk) 12:28, 3 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete per WP:TNT. The term definitely predates Polyak, e.g., (Melhlop and Lynch 1986). So, of the three sentences in the stub, one of them is factually wrong. Of the four sources, two are being used misleadingly and one, being an arXiv preprint, is not reliable. XOR'easter (talk) 20:38, 4 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete per XOReaster. Polyamorph (talk) 12:52, 6 December 2021 (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.
|
[
"spatial complexity",
"WP:GNG",
"WP:TNT",
"Nonlinear rescaling",
"arXiv"
] |
69,405,985 |
Municipal councillor (India)
|
Municipal Councillor(India) or ward councillor is an elected representative through municipal elections for a City's Municipal Corporation. The Constitution (SEVENTY-FOURTH AMENDMENT) ACT, 1992 lays down the provision for election of Municipal Councillors. They play an important role in selection of Mayor and representing their wards for many infrastructure and other development activities in their ward. They are helpful in the development of country by participating through local political bodies. They are also the closest link between Government and people.
== Election ==
Municipal Councillors election for municipal corporation had been specified in The Indian Constitution (Seventy-Fourth Amendment) Act, 1992. Municipal Councillors are members of local municipal corporation and representatives of citizens in a given place. They are elected during local body elections held in each state every five years. They represent the local political party. or fight as Independents not representing any political organisation. They play an important role in facilitation of Government schemes reaching to local people. Municipal Councillors play a major role in election of Mayor for city.
== Eligibility ==
Following are the eligibility to contest as Municipal Councillors:
Any gender.
21 years old.
Name appears in Official Voters list.
Not debarred by rules or by laws relating to contesting elections.
No formal education is needed though higher standards of education will be helpful.
No maximum age limit.
== Roles and responsibilities ==
Following are their roles and responsibilities:
Participating in development and evaluation of programmes conducted by municipality.
Working for the welfare and interests of the people in municipal corporation they are elected to represent.
Participate in election of town Mayor.
Take care of civic related issues such as road laying, development of infrastructure, issues related to town planning, disposal of waste management.
Activities relating to promotion of education, guidelines on public health, community welfare, public safety and other local development issues.
Promote programmes on development and cultural and other aesthetic related ones.
Approval of local development plans.
Listen to issues faced by people locally and address them.
|
[
"Mayor",
"municipal elections",
"List of municipal corporations in India",
"Municipal corporation (India)",
"List of political parties in India",
"Government",
"infrastructure"
] |
69,405,995 |
Pulie Badze Wildlife Sanctuary
|
Pulie Badze Wildlife Sanctuary is located in Kohima District of Nagaland. It was first designated as a protected area in 1980. The park is named after the mountain Pulie Badze, which means "Pulie's Seat", named after the legendary folktale character "Pulie".
The park is home to a vast variety of birds like Tragopan Blythii, White-naped Yuhina and Dark-rumped swift. The park has various tourist amenities such as campgrounds, walking paths, etc.
|
[
"Kohima District",
"Kohima",
"Dark-rumped swift",
"Bombay Natural History Society",
"White-naped yuhina",
"Blyth's tragopan",
"Nagaland",
"Pulie Badze"
] |
69,405,996 |
Shen'ao Power Plant
|
The Shen'ao Power Plant () was a coal-fired power plant in Ruifang District, New Taipei, Taiwan.
==History==
The power plant started operating in 1960. In 1965, trains began carrying coal to the power plant from coal mines in Ruifang. It was decommissioned in 2007.
|
[
"Ruifang District",
"Taiwan",
"coal",
"New Taipei",
"coal-fired power station",
"List of power stations in Taiwan"
] |
69,406,011 |
Template:Terrorist attacks against Israelis in the 2020s
|
[
"Israelis",
"2025 al-Funduq shooting",
"2023 Hamra junction shooting",
"2023 Neve Yaakov shooting",
"2024 Kiryat Malakhi attack",
"2024 Allenby Bridge shooting",
"2025 Bat Yam bus bombings",
"2023 Eli shooting",
"2023 Egypt–Israel border shooting incident",
"2023 Tunnels Checkpoint shooting",
"List of terrorist incidents",
"2023 Ramot Junction attack",
"2022 Tel Aviv shooting",
"Death of Tiran Fero",
"2020s",
"Gaza Strip",
"2023 Givat Shaul shooting",
"2024 Tarqumiyah shooting",
"7 October Hamas-led attack on Israel",
"Arab citizens of Israel",
"2022 Jerusalem bombings",
"2024 Eli shooting",
"2022 Kiryat Arba attack",
"2021 Tapuah Junction shooting",
"2022 El'ad stabbing",
"2024 Ra'anana attack",
"List of projectile attacks from Lebanon on Israel and the Golan Heights",
"2022 Ariel attack",
"Palestinians",
"2022 Bnei Brak shootings",
"2022 Beersheba attack",
"Egypt",
"2024 Jaffa shooting",
"2024 Tel Aviv truck attack",
"Wasim a-Sayed",
"2022 Hadera shooting",
"July 2023 Tel Aviv attack",
"West Bank",
"2024 Hadera stabbing attack",
"2023 Huwara shooting",
"2021 Jerusalem shooting",
"2024 Beersheva bus station shooting"
] |
|
69,406,013 |
Psycho (TV series)
|
Psycho () is a Russian drama series directed by Fyodor Bondarchuk. The project is being produced by NMG Studio and Videoprokat Studio. The series became one of the original projects in the more originals line.
The series premiered on November 5, 2020 on the online service more.tv.
== Plot ==
Oleg, a highly sought-after 40-year-old psychotherapist in Moscow, has a packed schedule that makes it difficult for clients to secure an appointment. To his patients, he appears to be a successful, self-assured family man. However, internally, he is in turmoil, struggling with his own need for professional help and the unresolved mystery of his wife’s disappearance over a year ago.
Oleg's mother, Kira, is a sexologist and university professor. Observing her son’s deep grief over his missing wife, she gives him a doll crafted in the likeness of a woman. In time, Oleg begins to see his wife in the doll, blurring the lines between reality and his own psychological distress.
== Cast ==
Konstantin Bogomolov as Oleg
Elena Lyadova as Vera
Roza Khairullina as Kira, Oleg's mother
Vladimir Simonov as Nikolay Stepanovich
Igor Vernik as Artyom
Marina Aleksandrova as Sasha, Artyom's wife
Anna Chipovskaya as Lena
Alexander Gorchilin as Kostya, Vera's boyfriend
Oleg Menshikov as Igor
Yuliya Aug as Nadenka
== Production ==
The creation of the series was announced on September 23, 2019 at the presentation of the launch of the online service more.tv in Moscow.
The project became the first series in the filmography of film director Fyodor Bondarchuk. The series was shot according to the script by Paulina Andreeva (Bondarchuk's wife), for whom the project became her debut as a screenwriter. Initially, he did not know who wrote the script (the manuscript was without authorship).
Filming of the series started on October 7, 2019 in the TsUM. With a break in early September 2020 filming was completed.
55 shooting shifts took place in Zaryadye Park, the Shchusev Museum of Architecture, Lytkarino and near Zvenigorod.
In June 2020 the series was presented on the first Russian online content market Key Buyers Event: Digital Edition.
On July 20, 2020 the teaser of the series premiered on the YouTube channel more.tv.
|
[
"Yuliya Aug",
"Shchusev Museum of Architecture",
"psychological drama",
"Elena Lyadova",
"Paulina Andreeva",
"Lytkarino",
"Marina Aleksandrova",
"Zaryadye Park",
"TsUM (Moscow)",
"Igor Vernik",
"RBK Group",
"Vladimir Simonov (actor)",
"Oleg Menshikov",
"Roza Khairullina",
"Alexander Gorchilin",
"Fyodor Bondarchuk",
"more.tv",
"Zvenigorod",
"Konstantin Bogomolov",
"Anna Chipovskaya"
] |
69,406,017 |
Over the Overlords
|
Over the Overlords is the sixth studio album by Chicago punk band Naked Raygun. It was released on August 2, 2021, on Wax Trax! Records. It is their first album in 31 years.
The album features an instrumental that appears in the first and last tracks, and occasionally as interludes throughout the album, mostly with a repeating drum line.
== Background ==
The album is notable for being the last release to feature bassist Pierre Kezdy, due to his death in October 2020. Although the album was released after Pierre's death, and also featured bassist Fritz Doreza, Pierre had recorded for the album prior to his death.
The album is also notable for being the first Naked Raygun album since 1990's Raygun...Naked Raygun, and the first release of new material since the series of singles the band released in 2009, 2010, and 2011.
In 2020, ProRawk Records released a compilation album titled ...On the Rawks, which featured the song "Broken Things". This would be the first release of a song from the album, although "Broken Things" would not be released as a single until November 19, 2021, along with a lyric video.
The album's first official single was "Living in the Good Times", which premiered as a music video on April 9, 2021. The music video features many fan-submitted clips of people singing the song in their homes, and contains a guest appearance from Daryl Wilson of The Bollweevils. It was filmed in and on the roof of Cobra Lounge in Chicago.
The song "Ode to Sean McKeough" is a tribute to former Cobra Lounge/All Rise Brewing owner and Riot Fest co-founder Sean McKeough, who passed away from a stroke in 2016.
== Track listing ==
Note: The CD and vinyl releases do not feature "Intro", "Vijay's Big Organ", "Eric's Across the Street", or "Outro Outre" on the printed track listing.
Note: The live version of "Knock Me Down" is specified as "live in Chicago 2015" on physical releases.
== Personnel ==
Naked Raygun
Jeff Pezzati – vocals
Eric Spicer – drums
Pierre Kezdy – bass
Bill Stephens – guitar
Fritz Doreza – bass
Additional musicians and production
Steven Gills – recording, engineering, mixing, production, additional keys
Naked Raygun – production
Mike Chicowicz – trumpet
Henry Salgado – trombone
Paul Mertens – tenor saxophone
Vijay Tellis-Nayak – additional keys
Morgan Spencer – backing vocals on "Suicide Bomb"
Ted Jenson – mastering
Album art and design
Mark Skillicorn – design
Brian Trost – design
Miguel Echemendia – cover illustration
|
[
"Wax Trax! Records",
"The Bollweevils",
"Jeff Pezzati",
"Cobra Lounge",
"Naked Raygun",
"Punk rock",
"Rolling Stone",
"Steven Gillis",
"Raygun...Naked Raygun",
"Daryl Wilson",
"Discogs"
] |
69,406,025 |
Hervé Grenier
|
Hervé Grenier (born 4 December 1967) is a French former professional tennis player.
Born and raised in Montbrison, Grenier turned professional in 1992 and made his only ATP Tour main draw appearance as a qualifier at the 1994 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon. He reached his career best singles world ranking of 443 in 1995 and featured that year in the qualifying draw for the French Open.
Grenier's son Hugo is a tennis player, currently competing on the ATP Tour. He is also the uncle of basketball player William Howard, who is the son of one of his sisters.
|
[
"1995 French Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"1995 French Open",
"ATP Tour",
"Montbrison, Loire",
"1994 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon",
"tennis",
"Hugo Grenier",
"Le Progrès",
"William Howard (basketball)"
] |
69,406,033 |
Template:R country data
|
[] |
|
69,406,044 |
Pickerill and Juliet gas fields
|
The Pickerill and Juliet gas fields are decommissioned natural gas producing facilities in the UK sector of the southern North Sea. The fields are located about east of Spurn Head, Lincolnshire. Pickerill was in operation from 1992 until 2018 and Juliet from 2014 to 2018.
== The fields ==
The Pickerill field was discovered in December 1984 by well 48/11b-4. The field is principally located in Block 48/11a and 48/11b and extends into Blocks 48/12c and 48/17b. The gas reservoir is a Rotliegend sandstone. At the time of start-up, the field was jointly owned by ARCO British Ltd (43.34%), British Sun Oil Co Ltd (23.33%), Superior Oil (UK) Ltd (20.00%), Deminex UK Oil & Gas Ltd (10.00%), and Canadian Superior Oil (UK) Ltd (3.33%).
== Development ==
The Pickerill field was developed by ARCO by two unattended offshore installations Pickerill A and Pickerill B, with gas transmitted by pipeline from Pickerill A to Theddlethorpe Gas Terminal (TGT), Lincolnshire. The main design parameters of the installations is shown in the table.
Gas treatment facilities on the installations were minimal. Normally gas from the wellheads was routed to the production manifold and then to the export line. There was a Test Separator with metering of the individual gas, condensate and water streams. There was a wet well separator for removing water from well fluids. There was also a pig launcher on each platform and a pig receiver on Pickerill A for the Pickerill B to A pipeline.
New pipeline reception facilities and process plant was installed at TGT as part of the Pickerill development.
Perenco assumed ownership of the Pickerill field in 2004. Gas export from Pickerill and Juliet ceased and the installations were shut-down. Subsequently their wells were plugged and abandoned and all structures above the seabed were removed.
|
[
"Wellhead",
"Shut down valve",
"Spurn",
"natural gas",
"Caister Murdoch System gas fields",
"Bacton Gas Terminal",
"Viking gas field",
"ARCO",
"Theddlethorpe Gas Terminal",
"Lincolnshire Offshore Gas Gathering System",
"Rotliegend",
"Perenco",
"List of oil and gas fields of the North Sea",
"North Sea"
] |
69,406,046 |
Draft:Fabienne Erni
|
----
Fabienne Erni is the female lead vocalist and harpist for the Swiss folk metal band Eluveitie. She is also the lead vocalist and founder of the symphonic metal band Illumishade. Erni has also learned to play several other instruments, including piano, ukulele and guitar. In June of 2024, she announced the formation of a third band called MINDNOVA.
== Career ==
Fabienne Erni first began to explore her passion for music at age 15, studying Complete Vocal Technique while attending a music school in Copenhagen. following the departure of former lead singer and hurdy-gurdy player Anna Murphy. She was recommended to Eluveitie founder Chrigel Glanzmann by Jonas Wolf, the current rhythm guitarist for the band. Wolf and Erni had previously met while attending the same school. and has taken on a position as frontwoman, often being the focus of the group's music videos and frequently giving interviews for the band as well as interviewing other metal musicians during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Eluveitie's official YouTube channel. Along with their studio album Ategnatos, Eluveitie also released a live album in the same year, Live at Masters of Rock 2019, which contains the audio from their performance at the titular festival and includes Erni's vocals and instrumentation.
In 2019, Erni formed Illumishade, a symphonic metal band with Wolf and several other musicians as a part of her Master's degree program. In May of 2020, Illumishade released a crowdfunded album titled Eclyptic: Wake of Shadows, whose songs detail a fictional fantasy world and the story within. Illumishade also launched a website featuring detailed lore of the fictional world in which their music is set, a quiz for fans to determine which fictitonal tribe they belong to, and commentaries on the composition of each song. Illumishade has now released multiple additional singles hinting at future releases. Erni has also lent her voice to several other music projects. These include Tvinna, an electronica prog pop group which also includes fellow Eluveitie members Rafael Salzman and Alain Ackerman; Another Kind, a side project of Vadim "Vidick" Ozhog of Infected Rain; Off The Cross, a Belgian metalcore band; and Spandex of Doom, an 80's cover band of which Wolf is also a member. In 2022, she announced the start of a solo project called Doomed with Pleasure. In early 2023, Glanzmann was unable to be a part of Eluveitie's North America tour, leaving Erni to lead the tour across the continent.
== Equipment ==
Celtic harp
Piano
Ukulele
Guitar
== Discography ==
=== With Eluveitie ===
Evocation II: Pantheon
Ategnatos
Live at Masters of Rock 2019
Anv
=== With Illumishade ===
Eclyptic: Wake of Shadows
Another Side of You
=== As a guest or session musician ===
Tvinna - The Gore
Another Kind - Defrost
Another Kind - Milestone
Another Kind - Sacred Place
Off The Cross - This Too Shall Pass
Lindsay Schoolcraft - New World
Fueurschwanz - Bastard von Asgard
Mortemia - Antidote
Tvinna - Louga
|
[
"Celtic harp",
"Anna Murphy (musician)",
"Folk metal",
"WP:NMUSIC",
"ukulele",
"Vocals",
"Nuclear Blast",
"Infected Rain",
"WP:GNG",
"symphonic metal",
"harp",
"folk metal",
"piano",
"WP:TOOSOON",
"Chrigel Glanzmann",
"Ukulele",
"Complete Vocal Technique",
"WP:TEAHOUSE",
"Eluveitie",
"Evocation II: Pantheon",
"Switzerland",
"Ategnatos"
] |
69,406,052 |
File:Psycho (TV Series).jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,082 |
File:The Sniffer.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,099 |
Violet McGraw
|
Violet Elizabeth McGraw (born April 22, 2011 In 2018 she had her first major role as young Nell Crain, younger version of Victoria Pedretti's character, in Mike Flanagan's Netflix series, The Haunting of Hill House. She had been announced as part of the cast in September 2017.
McGraw made her Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in 2021's Black Widow as a young Yelena Belova, with the adult version played by Florence Pugh. In 2021, she also starred in Separation (2021) as Jenny Vahn. She starred with fellow child star Amie Donald as one of the lead characters in the Universal Pictures technological horror film M3GAN, for Blumhouse, released in January 2023. The Hollywood Reporter noted that Donald and co-star McGraw "ended up becoming fast friends by the end of filming". In May 2023, McGraw was cast in A Wonderful Way with Dragons.
==Personal life==
Violet McGraw is the youngest of four children. Her older siblings are all also actors: Jack McGraw of The Good Dinosaur, Aidan McGraw of American Sniper, and Madeleine McGraw, who portrays Gwen in The Black Phone.
==Filmography==
===Film===
===Television===
|
[
"Deadline Hollywood",
"American Sniper",
"The Good Dinosaur",
"High Stakes Holiday",
"The Haunting of Hill House (TV series)",
"Doctor Sleep (2019 film)",
"M3GAN",
"/Film",
"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit",
"Victoria Pedretti",
"The Hollywood Reporter",
"Madeleine McGraw",
"Ready Player One (film)",
"Steven Spielberg",
"Universal Pictures",
"Variety (magazine)",
"Yelena Belova",
"Black Widow (2021 film)",
"Jett (TV series)",
"Netflix",
"Marvel Cinematic Universe",
"Bennett's War",
"Love (TV series)",
"Separation (2021 film)",
"Mike Flanagan (filmmaker)",
"Newshub",
"Florence Pugh",
"The Black Phone",
"Yelena Belova (Marvel Cinematic Universe)",
"M3GAN 2.0",
"Blumhouse Productions",
"Our Friend",
"Amie Donald",
"The Life of Chuck"
] |
69,406,101 |
Category:Lists of trade union locals
|
[
"local union"
] |
|
69,406,113 |
File:Nonajoler Kabbo Poster.jpg
|
==Summary==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
69,406,120 |
Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command
|
The Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command (ARITC) is a two-star command of the British Army and "is responsible for all recruiting, selection, and basic training of soldiers and the recruitment and selection of officers".
== History ==
Army 2020 was the name given to the restructuring of the British Army, in light of the 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review.
On 1 April 2018, the Army Recruiting and Training Division was disbanded. Before this date, the division (a major-general's command) was tasked with everything from recruiting to initial training to second-level training. The division at this time also controlled the Land Warfare Centre. However, following the Army 2020 Refine, the division was disestablished with the recruiting and initial training given to the new 'Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command', while the second-level and further training given to the Land Warfare Centre. The latter of which is now under direct control of Commander Field Army.
Since its formation, the command has been under control of Home Command.
== Structure ==
Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command was established on 1 April 2018. The Commander of this formation is a 2-star Major General.
Initial Training Group, at Trenchard Lines, Upavon – commanded by a brigadier
Army Training Unit Northern Ireland, at Abercorn Barracks, Ballykinler
'Army Recruiting Group
School of Infantry, at Vimy Barracks, Catterick Garrison''
Infantry Training Centre, at Helles Barracks, Catterick Garrison
1st Infantry Training Battalion
2nd Infantry Training Battalion
Infantry Training Centre Support Battalion
Army School of Ceremonial
Army School of Bagpipe Music and Highland Drumming, at Redford Barracks, Edinburgh
400 Troop, Royal Logistic Corps
Parachute Training Support Unit (PTSU), at RAF Brize Norton
Pegasus Company
Infantry Battle School, at Dering Lines, Brecon
Gurkha Company (Mandalay)
Specialist Weapons School, at Waterloo Lines, Warminster Garrison
Royal School of Military Engineering, at Brompton Barracks, Chatham Station''
Major-General Sharon Nesmith (2021–2022)
Major-General Thomas Bewick (2022–present)
== Footnotes ==
|
[
"Home Command (British Army)",
"Land Warfare Centre (United Kingdom)",
"Wyvern Barracks",
"Dering Lines, Brecon",
"Minley",
"Ballykinler",
"MoD Bicester",
"Defence Animal Training Regiment",
"Maindy Barracks",
"Exeter",
"Abercorn Barracks",
"Edinburgh",
"Infantry Training Centre (British Army)",
"Specialist Weapons School",
"Melton Mowbray",
"Upavon",
"Army Training Regiment",
"Kneller Hall",
"Defence College of Logistics",
"Defence Explosive Ordnance Disposal, Munitions and Search Training Regiment",
"Catterick Garrison",
"Sharon Nesmith",
"RAF Brize Norton",
"Strategic Defence and Security Review 2010",
"Cardiff",
"Army School of Bagpipe Music and Highland Drumming",
"Army Foundation College",
"Queen Elizabeth Barracks, Strensall",
"Trenchard Lines",
"Infantry Battle School",
"Bicester",
"Royal Military School of Music",
"Winterbourne Gunner",
"Strensall",
"Twickenham",
"Royal School of Military Engineering",
"School of Infantry",
"Army 2020",
"Initial Training Group",
"Royal Logistic Corps",
"Royal Army Veterinary Corps",
"Pirbright",
"Paul Nanson",
"Major General",
"Commander Field Army",
"Army School of Physical Training",
"Grantham",
"Defence Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Centre",
"Harrogate",
"British Army",
"Gibraltar Barracks, Minley",
"Redford Barracks",
"Winchester"
] |
69,406,121 |
Category:Russian LGBTQ-related television shows
|
[] |
|
69,406,126 |
A. Lutzky
|
Aaron Zucker (May 15, 1892 – September 13, 1957), better known by his pen name A. Lutzky, was a Ukrainian-born Jewish American Yiddish poet.
== Life ==
Lutzky was born on May 15, 1892 in Demydivka, Volhynian Governorate, the son of a bookkeeper.
When Lutzky was twelve, he left the cheder to study under a cantor in Lutsk. His Hassidic father disapproved of his son becoming a cantor and sent him to a Yeshiva. Under his mother's influence, he also learned how to play the violin. He began writing poems when he was fourteen, and they won praise from I. L. Peretz. He immigrated to America following his father's death in 1914, but not before visiting Peretz in Warsaw. During the visit, Peretz unsuccessfully tried to convince Lutzky to stay in Warsaw. Lutzky initially worked as a peddler, teacher, and violinist in America. He published his first poems in the Yidishes Tageblat and Der Tog in 1917. The Forward editor Abraham Cahan recognized Lutzky's talent, had him write a weekly poem for The Forward, and gave him the pseudonym "Lutzky" for his birthplace.
A year later, Lutzky served with the American Expeditionary Forces in France for World War I and fought in the trenches of Verdun. When he returned from his military service, he began writing in a new style that needed to be read aloud to be fully grasped. His first volume of poems, Nemt Es! S'is Gut Far Aykh! (Take It! It's Good for You!), was published in 1927. This was followed by Bereshis-Inmitten (The Beginning is the Middle) in 1932, Portretn (Portraits) in 1945, and A Bukh Tsum Lebn (A Book for Life) in 1948. He did dramatic impersonations of his poems, acting out through his face and body what his words hinted at. The impersonations were imitated by leading actors and entertainers and entered into the lasting Yiddish repertoire.
Lutzky was a member of the editorial staff of the Jewish Day-Morning Journal. He was buried in the Workmen's Circle section of Mount Carmel Cemetery.
|
[
"Fraye Arbeter Shtime",
"The Workers Circle",
"American Jewish Committee",
"Abraham Cahan",
"cheder",
"Volhynian Governorate",
"Warsaw",
"World War I",
"Jewish Morning Journal",
"I. L. Peretz",
"Demydivka",
"Lutsk",
"Mount Carmel Cemetery (Queens)",
"American Expeditionary Forces",
"Encyclopedia.com",
"Verdun",
"Google Books",
"The Forward",
"Internet Archive",
"Der Tog",
"Jewish Telegraphic Agency"
] |
69,406,127 |
Category:Pages using infobox UK place with non-numeric population
|
Pages where has a set to a non-numeric value.
|
[] |
69,406,134 |
Sizzler (food)
|
A sizzler is a medley dish invented in Mumbai. It is cooked and served on a hot metal plate that is placed on a wooden holder when taken to the customer's table. The dish is inspired by the Japanese Teppanyaki, in which vegetables and meat are cooked on a very hot metal griddle, to keep the inside soft and moist, and make the outside crunchy.
== History ==
The Indian sizzler was invented by Firoz Erani in Mumbai in 1963, and his restaurant near Excelsior cinema was called "Sizzler". He was inspired by an American version of Japanese Teppanyaki at a restaurant called Sizzler which he visited in California. Firoz's second wife Tachiko was Japanese. In 1967, they shut down their restaurant "Sizzler" and moved to the Isle of Man. Firoz's son Shahrookh Erani continued the tradition of serving sizzlers, and opened "Touche" on Warden Road in the same year. In 1971, he moved to Pune where he started a new restaurant "The Place: Touche". The restaurant is still popular today, is managed by Farida Vachha, and carries the mantle of being the original sizzler restaurant of India.
In 1975, a businessman called Vazir Rizvi started his own restaurant (and later chain) called "Kobe Sizzlers" in Mumbai. Other restaurants such as Yoko Sizzlers and Fountain Sizzlers soon followed suit in Mumbai, and Zamu's and Yana in Pune. Most large cities in India now have restaurants that specialise in sizzlers, and some of the iconic sizzler restaurant chains have branches in the UAE.
== Description ==
A sizzler is essentially a single dish meal, in which meats and vegetables are cooked in a sauce on a hot metal plate. The dish has been described as an "open-roasted, grilled or shallow fried piece of meat, chicken, fish or vegetable patty, served on an oval shaped metal or stone hot plate, kept on a wooden base. The word "sizzler" comes from the sizzle that one hears after heating the dish under a grill. The metal plate is heated to the point right before service, that when the finished steak is placed on it, it sizzles and the smoky flavour makes the dish more enticing." In terms of preparation, the equipment and method for all sizzlers is the same, despite the large variety of ingredients and sauces.
|
[
"California",
"Firoz Erani",
"Sizzler",
"Vazir Rizvi",
"Pune",
"Teppanyaki",
"Mumbai",
"Isle of Man",
"UAE"
] |
69,406,136 |
Classical music (disambiguation)
|
Classical music generally refers to the art music of the Western world, considered to be distinct from Western folk music or popular music traditions
Classical music may also refer to:
Classical period (music)
Classical Music (magazine)
Classical music blog
For other traditions see list of classical and art music traditions
==By country==
Australian classical music
Classical music of Birmingham
Italian classical music
Russian classical music
Classical music in Kosovo
Classical music in Scotland
Classical music of the United Kingdom
Classical music of the United States
==Non-Western traditions==
List of classical and art music traditions
Andalusian classical music
Byzantine music
Indian classical music
Gagaku
Ottoman music
Persian traditional music
Yayue
|
[
"Byzantine music",
"Persian traditional music",
"list of classical and art music traditions",
"Classical music in Scotland",
"Classical music of the United States",
"Classical Music (magazine)",
"List of classical and art music traditions",
"Andalusian classical music",
"Classical music in Kosovo",
"Italian classical music",
"Classical music",
"Gagaku",
"Art music",
"Classical music of the United Kingdom",
"Indian classical music",
"Classical music of Birmingham",
"Classical period (music)",
"Classical music blog",
"Russian classical music",
"List of classical music concerts with an unruly audience response",
"Yayue",
"Ottoman music",
"Australian classical music"
] |
69,406,141 |
Nandivada Rathnasree
|
Nandivada Rathnasree (26 November 1963 – 9 May 2021) or N. Rathnasree was an Indian astrophysicist, science communicator, and science historian, who was the director of India's Nehru Planetarium for over twenty years. She was responsible for improvements to the planetarium, as well as for researching the use of historical architectural astronomical instruments in India. She is known for her work in science communication.
== Life and education ==
N. Rathnasree spent her childhood in the state of Andhra Pradesh. She completed her undergraduate education at the University College for Women in Hyderabad, and completed a master's degree in physics from Hyderabad Central University. She completed a Ph.D. at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), where she was their first doctoral student, studying binary stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud under the supervision of physicist Alak Ray. She married fellow physicist Patrick Dasgupta, and they had one son.
She died of COVID-19 in May 2021.
== Career ==
N. Rathnasree continued her research into radio observations of pulsars at the University of Vermont between 1992 and 1994, and at the Raman Research Institute in Bengaluru until 1996. While working in the United States, she was an observer at the Arecibo Radio Telescope in Puerto Rico, where she researched the stability of radio emissions from pulsars. She served as the director of the planetarium for a period of 21 years, during which she upgraded the planetarium's mechanisms from an opto-mechanical to a hybrid system, which used digital as well as mechanical projection. In addition, she conducted a number of supervised research and outreach programs aimed at students.
In the early 2000s, she began research into the use of historical architectural structures that were intended to function as astronomical instruments. These structures, known as Jantar Mantar, were established in several locations in India. Rathnasree worked with the stone Jantar Mantars established in Delhi, Jaipur, Ujjain, and Varanasi, teaching students and researchers their uses, and publishing several research papers on their historical use and design. Rathnasree proposed that the stone-built Jantar Mantar observatories could be used when teaching astronomy to today's students. She later worked with the Archaeological Survey of India on a project to restore the Delhi Jantar Mantar. During the International Astronomical Union Symposium (IAUS340) on Solar Physics, at Jaipur in 2018, she introduced the Jaipur Jantar Mantar to researchers.
She was a member of the Astronomical Society of India, and in 2014, she was appointed to chair their Public Outreach and Education Committee, where she directed a number of programs aimed at improving the communication of scientific ideas and concepts to laypeople. She worked with the National Council of Science Museums as an advisor on astronomy-related communications, and was also the chief editor for science-related publications for the National Council of Educational Research and Training. She was a vocal opponent of astrology, and wrote publicly to criticise a decision by the Indian University Grants Commission to introduce it as a subject to be taught in higher education. She also advocated against light pollution in India.
|
[
"science communication",
"astrology",
"light pollution",
"Science communication",
"National Council of Science Museums",
"Archaeological Survey of India",
"Outlook India",
"Osmania University College for Women",
"Astronomical Society of India",
"Nehru Planetarium",
"Tata Institute of Fundamental Research",
"pulsar",
"Arecibo Telescope",
"Mahatma Gandhi",
"Ujjain",
"COVID-19",
"Astrophysics",
"National Council of Educational Research and Training",
"Varanasi",
"Delhi",
"Alak Ray",
"Jaipur",
"Large Magellanic Cloud",
"Jantar Mantar",
"University of Hyderabad",
"University Grants Commission (India)",
"science historian",
"Raman Research Institute",
"International Astronomical Union",
"University of Vermont",
"Andhra Pradesh"
] |
69,406,161 |
Philippe Lavigne
|
Philippe Lavigne is a French general. He was the Chief of Staff of the French Air and Space Force from 2018 to 2021 and the Supreme Allied Commander Transformation HQ from 23 September 2021 to 23 September 2024.
He graduated from Prytanée National Militaire in 1985 and joined the School of Air (Salon-de-Provence Air School) in which he qualified as a pilot in 1989. He flew the Mirage 2000 during operations in the former Yugoslavia and in Iraq, where he flew more than 2000 flight hours. He flew more than 50 combat missions. He was later in command of Fighter Squadron Vendée. He attended the Collège interarmées de Défense (Joint Defence College) to until 2000 before commanding the Vendée. He was in charge of Operation Carbet in Haiti in 2004. He participated in the South Asia Operation Béryx in 2005. He was moved to Paris to serve the Paris-based Joint Strategic Planning and Command Operations Centre which he involved in several peacekeeping and humanitarian operations to until 2005 when he rose to be the planning officer of Air Force Staff, in the office which he relate with issues related to space and European cooperation. He went on to Institut des Hautes Études de Défense Nationale (Institute of Advanced Studies, National Defence) for Centre for Higher Military Studies Defence policy course to until 2009 and of the Centre des Hautes Études Militaires too, he became the deputy director incharge of war material exports in the General Secretariat for Defence and National Security after completing the policy course to 2012.
He served as the director of information in Armed Forces HQ in 2014 before he rose to be incharge of the French Chief of Defence's front office to until 2018, he was moved to Paris to occupied the Afghanistan Kabul International Airport through which French forces engaged in Operation Pamir of the both he supervised the formation of operations from the airport to civil authorities under the military responsibilities.
==NATO==
He was nominated to head the Supreme Allied Commander Transformation HQ in Norfolk, Virginia by the North Atlantic Council on 28 May 2021, and formally took over the role on 23 September 2021.
==Personal life==
General Philippe Lavigne has one child.
==Awards Decorations==
Commander of the Legion of Honour
Commander of the National Order of Merit
Officer of the Legion of Honor
Cross for Military Valour
Overseas Medal
Pingat Jasa Gemilang (Tentera) Meritorious Service Medal (Military)
|
[
"Bergerac, Dordogne",
"Allied Command Transformation",
"France",
"André Lanata",
"Vendée",
"Chief of Staff of the French Air and Space Force",
"Yugoslav Wars",
"Kabul International Airport",
"Dijon",
"Institut des hautes études de défense nationale",
"Mirage 2000",
"Stéphane Mille",
"Paris",
"Centre des hautes études militaires",
"Prytanée national militaire",
"Supreme Allied Commander Transformation",
"North Atlantic Council",
"Chief of the Defence Staff (France)",
"Bordeaux–Mérignac Airport",
"Collège interarmées de défense",
"Norfolk, Virginia"
] |
69,406,164 |
Mirrors in Shinto
|
A is a sacred mirror in Shinto. Some mirrors are enshrined in the main hall of a shrine as a sacred object of the divine spirit, or are placed in front of the deity in a hall of worship. Japanese folklore is rich in stories of life before mirrors were commonplace.
The Yata no Kagami, one of the Three Sacred Treasures, is also one of the sacred mirrors.
== Significance ==
Spirits are enshrined in divine mirrors as Shintai. Mirrors are believed to have been used to reflect sunlight during Sun-Worship, creating optical effects.
In the Nihon Shoki, Amaterasu tells her grandson, Ninigi-no-Mikoto, "Take this and revere it as if it were myself".
It is believed a mirror helps a believer see a true image of themselves and their devotion and worshipping the divine within themselves.
== Types of divine mirrors ==
=== Goryo Shintai ===
In Shinto shrines and the imperial court, mirrors are often used as Shintai. The regulations state, "The diameter of the mirror shall be 1 shaku for the heavenly deities and emperors, and 7 shaku for the nobles. The name of the deity shall be engraved on the reverse side, a red cord shall be attached to a knob, and it shall be placed in a brocade pouch. The mirror may be wrapped in silk and placed in the hidai, then in the funadai, and then covered with the bedding.
|
[
"Western Han",
"Himiko",
"Shinto",
"Japanese folklore",
"Vermilion Bird",
"Yata no Kagami",
"Nihon Shoki",
"Shang dynasty",
"Zhou dynasty",
"White Tiger (mythology)",
"Sun-Worship",
"Cao Wei",
"Silla",
"wajinden",
"Black Tortoise",
"Old Man of the South Pole",
"Amaterasu",
"1895",
"Ninigi-no-Mikoto",
"Azure Dragon",
"Yamatai",
"Shintai",
"Queen Mother of the West",
"Bronze mirror",
"Suda Hachiman Shrine Mirror",
"Imperial Regalia of Japan",
"King Father of the East",
"Xian (Taoism)"
] |
69,406,176 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Octalux
|
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. ♠PMC♠ (talk) 05:31, 8 December 2021 (UTC)
===:Octalux===
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Contested PROD Appears to fail WP:NBAND, no noteworthy awards, little to no coverage. KH-1 (talk) 05:22, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Bands and musicians-related deletion discussions. KH-1 (talk) 05:22, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Kentucky-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 07:48, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete textbook WP:GARAGE band (complete with ridiculous XTREME band photo, single-purpose creator account, and MySpace link), all the sources I found appear to be blogs. Dronebogus (talk) 13:19, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete - They seem proud to be unsigned, but that's why they haven't gained significant and reliable coverage during their many years of existence. Per WP:NBAND, placing 2nd or 3rd in local battles of the bands does not satisfy the requirement for "major" awards, and they are not prominent representatives of any genre or scene just because they got some gigs. The only halfway informative thing I found is this unreliable interview: [https://livelifethrumusiccom.wordpress.com/2017/09/26/getting-real-with-brandon-hurley-from-rock-band-octalux/, and otherwise they have never graduated from their own social media and streaming entries. ---DOOMSDAYER520 (TALK|CONTRIBS) 15:31, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete per above. GhostDestroyer100 (talk) 20:34, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete, no significant and reliable coverage to establish notability. Myxomatosis57 (talk) 12:21, 5 December 2021 (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:GARAGE",
"WP:NBAND",
"Octalux",
"WP:SIGCOV"
] |
69,406,179 |
Quadrat Elahi Rahman Shafique
|
Quadrat Elahi Rahman Shafique (1 November 1962 – 25 February 2009) was a colonel in the Bangladesh Army who died in the 2009 Bangladesh Rifles mutiny.
== Early life ==
Shafique was born on 1 November 1962 in Rangpur District, East Pakistan, Pakistan. His father Habibur Rahman was a former secretary of the government of Bangladesh, and mother Rokeya Rahman was a teacher at Viqarunnisa Noon School and College. He is the nephew of former president Hussain Muhammad Ershad. After graduating from Jhenaidah Cadet College, Shafique joined Bangladesh Military Academy on 1981. Their son, Saquib Rahman is a former Jatiyo Party politician, the editor of Progress Magazine and a senior lecturer at the Department of Law in North South University.
== Death ==
Shafique had arrived for the darbar (conference of all sector commanders) in the Bangladesh Rifles headquarters. He was killed on 25 February 2009 by Bangladesh Rifles mutineers during the Bangladesh Rifles revolt. Shahid Colonel Kudrat Elahi Junior School in Dinajpur was named after him.
|
[
"Bangladesh Rifles",
"United Nations Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina",
"Hussain Muhammad Ershad",
"North South University",
"UNMIBH",
"Institute of Business Administration, University of Dhaka",
"Chittagong Hill Tracts Conflict",
"Dhaka Division",
"Juba",
"Bangladesh Army",
"2009 Bangladesh Rifles Mutiny",
"East Bengal Regiment",
"United Nations Mission in Sudan",
"Rangpur District",
"Military Institute of Science and Technology",
"UNMIS",
"Senior Tigers",
"Dhaka Tribune",
"Bangladesh Military Academy",
"Colonel (Bangladesh)",
"Jhenaidah Cadet College",
"Bandarban Cantonment",
"Border Guards Bangladesh",
"University of Chittagong",
"East Pakistan",
"Pilkhana, Bangladesh",
"Bangladesh Rifles revolt",
"School of Infantry and Tactics",
"National Defence College (Bangladesh)",
"The Daily Star (Bangladesh)",
"Chittagong Hill Tracts",
"Defence Services Command and Staff College (Bangladesh)",
"Dinajpur District, Bangladesh"
] |
69,406,185 |
Sébastien Hette
|
Sébastien Hette (born 9 June 1972) is a French former professional tennis player.
A French Junior Davis Cup representative, Hette competed on the professional tour in the 1990s and had a best singles world ranking of 379. He featured in qualifying draws at the Australian Open and French Open. His only ATP Tour main draw appearance came in 1994 at the Jakarta Open, as a lucky loser from qualifying.
Hette now runs a retrogaming business called Reset XP. He was previously employed by the French Tennis Federation as the Operational Director of Davis Cup and Fed Cup events.
|
[
"Fed Cup",
"L'Équipe",
"lucky loser",
"Davis Cup",
"Junior Davis Cup",
"1993 French Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"Australian Open",
"Jakarta Open",
"Le Monde.fr",
"ATP Tour",
"tennis",
"1994 Australian Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"French Tennis Federation",
"French Open",
"retrogaming"
] |
69,406,203 |
Carla P. Catterall
|
Carla Perdita Catterall (born 1951) is an Australian ecologist and ornithologist. As of 2021 she is Emeritus Professor at Griffith University.
== Career ==
Born in 1951, Catterall graduated from the University of Queensland with a PhD in 1979. Her thesis, titled "Behavioural strategies of a silvereye population, (Zosterops lateralis chlorocephala Campbell and White), in relation to food resources, on a coral cay island", was published by the Royal Australian Ornithologists Union in 1982.
In 2010 Catterall won the D. L. Serventy Medal in recognition of her "outstanding contributions to publication in the science of ornithology in the Australasian region". At the time of her award she was an associate professor at Griffith University and had "served on 13 advisory bodies and written 33 consultancy reports for local, state and commonwealth governments, community groups and private industry". She is a former member of the editorial board of Emu: Australian Ornithology.
|
[
"Ecological Society of Australia",
"Capricorn silvereye",
"University of Queensland",
"Emu (journal)",
"Griffith University",
"Noisy miner",
"D. L. Serventy Medal"
] |
69,406,206 |
The Mythmaker
|
The Mythmaker is a 1957 spy thriller novel by the British writer Sarah Gainham, her third published novel. At with many of her works it takes place in Vienna, where she settled in the post-war era. It was released in the United States in 1958 under the alternative title Appointment in Vienna.
==Synopsis==
Kit Quest, a half-Hungarian British Army officer travels to Vienna on the pretext of visiting his family but in fact he is charged with hunting down a war criminal Otto Berger.
|
[
"Sarah Gainham",
"United Kingdom",
"thriller novel",
"alternative title",
"Arthur Barker Limited",
"E.P. Dutton",
"spy novel",
"Vienna"
] |
69,406,218 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Muhammad Al Hayrsh
|
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. ✗plicit 12:09, 14 December 2021 (UTC)
===:Muhammad Al Hayrsh===
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Does not satisfy WP:GNG due to lack of reliable independent references that should be in English language. MickyShy (talk) 05:32, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Academics and educators-related deletion discussions. MickyShy (talk) 05:32, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Morocco-related deletion discussions. MickyShy (talk) 05:32, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete. no citations on GS (please correct if wrong) fails WP:Prof. Xxanthippe (talk) 05:40, 1 December 2021 (UTC).
Comment. There is no requirement for sources to be in English. Someone who reads Arabic should check whether the sources appear to provide the reliable in-depth independent coverage of the subject that would be needed for notability through WP:GNG. —David Eppstein (talk) 08:52, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, ✗plicit 11:58, 8 December 2021 (UTC)
Delete fails WP:GNG and WP:PROF.Pharaoh of the Wizards (talk) 12:34, 11 December 2021 (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.
|
[
"Muhammad Al Hayrsh",
"WP:GNG",
"WP:PROF"
] |
69,406,219 |
File:The Mythmaker.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,224 |
Pulie Badze
|
Pulie Badze, is a mountain peak in Kohima District of Nagaland, standing at an elevation of overlooking the capital city of Nagaland, Kohima, it is the centerpiece of Pulie Badze Wildlife Sanctuary.
|
[
"Kohima District",
"Kohima",
"Pulie Badze Wildlife Sanctuary",
"Bombay Natural History Society",
"Nagaland",
"Jotsoma"
] |
69,406,226 |
Shiori's Diary
|
[
"manga",
"Seven Seas Entertainment",
"Rakujitsu no Pathos",
"Mikazuki ga Waratteru",
"Nihon Bungeisha",
"Seinen manga",
"Natalie (website)",
"tankōbon",
"Anime News Network",
"Erotic romance novels",
"MOS:A&M",
"Futari no Ouchi",
"Books Kinokuniya"
] |
|
69,406,232 |
Category:Ashkenazi Jewish culture in Los Angeles
|
[] |
|
69,406,241 |
Shinko-shiki
|
Shinko-shiki (神幸式), also known as Shinko-sai (神幸祭), is a ceremonial practice within Shintoism involving the procession of a kami's shintai, or divine object. The shintai of the Kami is transferred from the primary Shinto shrine to a Mikoshi, a portable shrine, as part of the ritual. Typically, this ceremony occurs within the context of an annual festival hosted by a shrine.
The prominent feature of the procession involves a group of participants who proceed either on foot or through various modes of transportation along a predetermined route. These parades necessitate organizational efforts and resources, commonly arranged as integral components of a shrine's ceremonial or associated endeavors.
Shinko-shiki is primarily linked with the Kami's visitation to its adherents, although interpretations and ceremonial practices can vary significantly.
For example, the Tokyo Shinko-shiki tends to be lively with a focus on revelry and alcohol consumption, whereas in Yuzawa, it is characterized by a more subdued and formal atmosphere.
|
[
"Mikoshi",
"shrine",
"Shinto",
"Yuzawa, Akita",
"Gion Matsuri",
"Tokyo",
"Yasaka Shrine",
"shintai",
"festival",
"kami"
] |
69,406,243 |
1967 Delhi Metropolitan Council election
|
The first elections for the Delhi Metropolitan Council were held in Indian National Capital Territory of Delhi in February 1967. L. K. Advani of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh was sworn in as the Chairman of the Council.
On 1 November 1956, under States Reorganisation Act, 1956, Delhi was converted from a state to a Union Territory. This resulted in the dissolution of the Delhi Legislative Assembly. In September 1966, with the passing of The Delhi Administration Act, 1966, the Delhi Metropolitan Council came into being, with 56 elected and five nominated members with the Lt. Governor of Delhi as its head. The Council however had no legislative powers, only an advisory role in the governance of Delhi. This set up functioned until 1990. Delhi Gazetteer
}}
==Executive Council members==
|
[
"1967 elections in India",
"National Capital Territory of Delhi",
"Lt. Governor of Delhi",
"Republican Party of India",
"Indian National Congress",
"Bloomsbury Publishing",
"Bharatiya Jana Sangh",
"L. K. Advani",
"Delhi Legislative Assembly",
"India",
"Delhi Metropolitan Council",
"States Reorganisation Act, 1956"
] |
69,406,250 |
Julien Chauvin (tennis)
|
Julien Chauvin (born 17 April 1975) is a French former professional tennis player.
Chauvin played collegiate tennis for the University of Mobile in Alabama, then competed on the professional tour during the late 1990s, reaching a best singles world ranking of 184. He made the third and final qualifying round for the 1997 French Open, with wins over Mark Knowles and Joan Balcells (retired hurt). His only ATP Tour main draw appearance came at the 1997 Marbella Open, where he lost in the first round to seventh seed Julián Alonso.
|
[
"University of Mobile",
"Mark Knowles",
"1997 French Open",
"Joan Balcells",
"1997 Marbella Open",
"Julián Alonso",
"1997 French Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"Le Parisien",
"ATP Tour",
"tennis"
] |
69,406,251 |
File:Shiori’s Diary 1.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"Nihon Bungeisha",
"Fair use"
] |
69,406,275 |
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Malawi
|
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Malawi refers to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and its members in Malawi. The first convert baptisms were performed in 1992. In 2022, there were 3,872 members in 12 congregations. Malawi was one of the fastest growing countries for LDS Church membership over the past decade.
== History ==
{{Historical populations
|title = Membership in Malawi
The first convert baptisms occurred when Brian and Betty Peedle, missionaries serving in Zimbabwe, drove to Sitima Village in July 1992. They taught and baptized 75 individuals, some waiting as long as 14 years to join the church.
On April 25, 1995, the church received legal recognition in Malawi and it was assigned to the Zimbabwe Harare Mission. On October 25, 2011, Elder Russell M. Nelson of the Quorum of the Twelve, visited Malawi and dedicated the country for the preaching of the gospel.
===Humanitarian Efforts===
In 2002, The LDS Church sent food boxes packed by volunteers, cereal, and grain to Malawi and neighboring countries to assist those hindered by the drought. The Church was undertook a campaign to vaccinate Malawians against measles in 2008. In 2016, Lilongwe Mayor, Willie Chapondera, commended missionaries for enhancing behavior change among individuals in the city. In 2018, the LDS Church stated it will continue taking part of national development through its self-reliance program. Between July 2019 and June 2020, partnering with Sightsavers, more than 130,000 people were screened for vision loss, and 924 received sight-restoring surgery. In 2020, the LDS Church donated $20 Million to UNICEF's global vaccination effort, benefitting those in Malawi and other countries. The LDS Church raised $200,000 worldwide in 2021 to construct school blocks at a primary school in Traditional Authority Chitukula in Lilongwe and provide desks and other furnishings.
== Stakes and Congregations ==
As of November 2024, Malawi had the following stakes and congregations:
Lilongwe Malawi Stake
Chinsapo Branch
Kalambo 1 Ward
Kalambo 2 Ward
Kasungu 1st Ward
Kasungu 2nd Ward
Kawale Ward
Lilongwe Ward
Presidential Way Ward
Blantyre Malawi Stake
Bangwe Branch
Blantyre 1st Ward
Blantyre 2nd Ward
Chilomoni Branch
Chirimba Ward
Liwonde Branch
Ndirande 1st Ward
Ndirande 2nd Branch
Soche Branch
Zingwangwa Ward
The Zambia Lusaka Mission Branch serves individuals and families not in proximity to a meetinghouse. Congregations in a district are called branches, regardless of size.
==Missions==
On April 25, 1995, the church received legal recognition in Malawi and it was assigned to the Zimbabwe Harare Mission. Malawi became part of the Zambia Lusaka Mission when it was created on July 1, 2011. Temples under construction or announced that will bring a temple closer to Malawi include: The Harare Zimbabwe Temple and the Nairobi Kenya Temple, which are both under construction, and the Beira Mozambique Temple which was announced on April 4, 2021.
|
[
"the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints",
"Beira Mozambique Temple",
"Malawi",
"Membership statistics of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints",
"Area (LDS Church)",
"Richard P. Lindsay",
"Church News",
"Nairobi Kenya Temple",
"Russell M. Nelson",
"Nyasa Times",
"Religion in Malawi",
"Johannesburg South Africa Temple",
"Deseret News",
"Harare Zimbabwe Temple"
] |
69,406,295 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Cannabis in Japan
|
[
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}",
"Cannabis in Japan",
"cannabis in Japan"
] |
|
69,406,296 |
Wikipedia:Bot Approvals Group/nominations/Md Nahid Islam Sumon
|
===BAG Nomination: Md Nahid Islam Sumon ===
Candidate acceptance:
====Questions====
====Discussion====
|
[] |
69,406,298 |
Ryderwear
|
{{Infobox company
| name = Ryderwear
| logo =
| type =
| genre =
| founded =
| founder = David Lukic and Natalie Lukic Ryderwear tied up with the professional weightlifter Big Ramy.
==History==
Ryderwear was founded by David Lukic and his now-wife Natalie Lukic in 2009.
|
[
"Apparel",
"Sportswear (activewear)",
"Athleisure",
"South Australia",
"List of South Australian manufacturing businesses",
"Big Ramy",
"Lonsdale, South Australia",
"Fitness fashion",
"Fashion accessory",
"Sports equipment",
"Australia"
] |
69,406,300 |
Clinton Liberty
|
Clinton Liberty (born 4 June 1998) is an Irish actor and dancer. On television, he is known for his roles in the ITV miniseries Holding (2022) and the HBO series House of the Dragon (2024–). His films include Touchdown (2024).
==Early life==
Liberty grew up in Laytown, County Meath. He is of Jamaican and Nigerian descent. Liberty attended Scoil an Spioraid Naoimh and then Coláiste na hInse in Bettystown. He was a member of the dance club Fit Kids/Fit Teens and danced competitively. He went on to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Acting from The Lir Academy at Trinity College Dublin in 2019.
==Career==
With his background in dance, Liberty made his onscreen debut as a dancer in the 2016 coming-of-age film Handsome Devil. On stage, he starred in the 2019 productions of Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing with the Rough Magic Theatre Company and The Anvil in Manchester, England. He then landed a recurring role as Connell's school friend Kiernan in the miniseries Normal People, an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Sally Rooney.
The following year, Liberty joined the main cast of the Viaplay spy thriller Red Election as Marcus and made a guest appearance in the RTÉ One series Smother. In 2022, he starred as Linus Dunne alongside Conleth Hill in the ITV adaptation of Graham Norton's debut novel Holding and appeared in the Sky Cinema film This Christmas.
Liberty has an upcoming role in the horror film Feed alongside Daisy Jelley and Niamh McCormack. As of November 2024, the film has began production.
In April 2023, it was rumoured Liberty had joined the cast of the HBO fantasy series House of the Dragon for its second season in an undisclosed role, later confirmed to be Addam of Hull.
==Filmography==
===Film===
===Television===
==Stage==
|
[
"Handsome Devil (film)",
"Sally Rooney",
"Theatre Royal Waterford",
"ITV (TV network)",
"House of the Dragon",
"ITV (network)",
"Coláiste na hInse",
"HBO",
"Normal People",
"List of House of the Dragon characters",
"Laytown",
"RTÉ One",
"This Christmas (2022 film)",
"Normal People (TV series)",
"Holding (TV series)",
"Trinity College Dublin",
"The Lir Academy",
"Graham Norton",
"Manchester",
"Daisy Jelley",
"Much Ado About Nothing",
"This Is Christmas (film)",
"Bachelor of Arts",
"Kilkenny",
"Touchdown (2024 film)",
"Bettystown",
"Niamh McCormack",
"Red Election",
"Sky Cinema",
"Shakespeare",
"Smother (TV series)",
"Conleth Hill",
"Addam of Hull",
"Viaplay"
] |
69,406,301 |
Manta (platform)
|
Manta is a South Korean digital comics (or webtoons, webcomics, manhwa) platform owned and operated by RIDI Corporation. It works with its own in-house studio as well as outside partners to create original digital comics.
== Service ==
Manta is a subscription-based service that allows all members to read unlimited amounts of content on its app at a fixed price. The app is available for Android and iOS devices, and all content can be viewed from its official website.
Manta is known to be the first subscription-based webcomic platform in the market.
Many of Manta's webcomics share the IP with those in Ridibooks, which is RIDI Corporation's domestic South Korean business. Main titles of Ridibooks such as Under the Oak Tree () and Lady Devil () are also well known globally through Manta.
The platform now serves both English and Spanish.
== History ==
Manta was founded by Kisik Bae, Founder and CEO of RIDI Corporation, in November 2020.
RIDI Corporation initially established its presence in the industry as an e-book publisher, and over time, it expanded into other content domains, with a particular focus on webnovels. Later, RIDI Corporation, with an extensive portfolio of IP it has acquired, started to adapt the stories into digital comic formats. A significant portion of the comics published on Manta are Manta-owned, and they also do collaborate with external partners and license certain series from them.
It was a latecomer in the webcomic industry, but rather than pay-per-episode, Manta was one of the few subscription-based webcomics services available.
Four months after its launch in March 2021, Manta ranked first in the US Google Play Store's cartoon category.
== Content ==
Manta focuses mainly on bringing original stories from RIDI, a Korean digital content platform also owned by RIDI Corporation, into webcomics. Disobey the Duke if you Dare, and Semantic Error, the latter having also been adapted into a live action streaming television series. It also offers stories in other genres including action, thriller, and horror.
The platform also works with third-party IP rights holders to extend existing films and live-action storytelling into webcomics, such as Svaha: the Sixth Finger and A Hard Day. In March 2023, Manta announced that Disobey the Duke If You Dare would become its first title for distribution as printed graphic novels.
== Userbase ==
In an Interview, Kisik Bae said the app has reached five million downloads as of April 2022. The number has gone up to eight million in October 2022, In a June 2024 interview, Manta's CEO, Travis Kim, mentioned that the number has now increased to 15 million.
|
[
"webcomic",
"Webtoon",
"Kakao Webtoon",
"Digital comics",
"The Korea Herald",
"digital comic",
"Webtoon (platform)",
"The Korea Economic Daily",
"Android (operating system)",
"manhwa",
"Romance comics",
"Web novels in South Korea",
"webtoon",
"iOS"
] |
69,406,303 |
2009 European Ladies' Team Championship
|
The 2009 European Ladies' Team Championship took place 7–11 July at Bled Golf & Country Club in Bled, Slovenia. It was the 27th women's golf amateur European Ladies' Team Championship.
== Venue ==
The hosting King's Course at Bled Golf & Country Club, the oldest golf course in Slovenia, located 2 kilometers east of Bled, was built in 1937 in varied and diverse terrains, on the initiative of the Yugoslav royal family. It was re-designed in 1972 by golf architect Donald Harradine.
The championship course was set up with par 73.
== Format ==
All participating teams played two qualification rounds of stroke-play with six players, counted the five best scores for each team.
The eight best teams formed flight A, in knock-out match-play over the next three days. The teams were seeded based on their positions after the stroke-play. The first placed team was drawn to play the quarter final against the eight placed team, the second against the seventh, the third against the sixth and the fourth against the fifth. In each match between two nation teams, two 18-hole foursome games and five 18-hole single games were played. Teams were allowed to switch players during the team matches, selecting other players in to the afternoon single games after the morning foursome games. Teams knocked out after the quarter finals played one foursome game and four single games in each of their remaining matches. Games all square after 18 holes were declared halved, if the team match was already decided.
The seven teams placed 9–15 in the qualification stroke-play formed flight B, to play similar knock-out match-play, with one foursome game and four single games, to decide their final positions.
The three teams placed 16–18 in the qualification stroke-play formed flight C, to meet each other, with one foursome game and four single games, to decide their final positions.
== Teams ==
18 nation teams contested the event. Each team consisted of six players.
Players in the teams
== Winners ==
Team France lead the opening 36-hole qualifying competition, with a score of 3 over par 733, two strokes ahead of defending champions team Sweden.
Individual leaders in the 36-hole stroke-play competition was Carlota Ciganda, Spain and Marieke Nivard, Netherlands, each with a score of 7 under par 139, one stroke ahead of Lucie André, France..
Team Germany won the championship, beating England 4–3 in the final and earned their first title.
Team France earned third place, beating Spain 4–3 in the bronze match.
== Results ==
Qualification round
Team standings
* Note: In the event of a tie the order was determined by the better total non-counting scores.
Individual leaders
Note: There was no official award for the lowest individual score.
Flight A
Bracket
Final games
Flight B
Bracket
Flight C
Team matches
Final standings
Sources:
|
[
"Rachel Jennings",
"Marieke Nivard",
"Urša Orehek",
"Audrey Riguelle",
"Spain",
"Germany",
"European Amateur Team Championship",
"Bled Golf & Country Club",
"Caroline Masson",
"Amy Boulden",
"Bled",
"France",
"Laura Gonzalez Escallon",
"Pia Halbig",
"2010 European Ladies' Team Championship",
"European Golf Association",
"Valentine Derrey",
"Staphanie Kirchmaier",
"European Ladies Amateur Championship",
"Chloé Leurquin",
"Camilla Lennarth",
"Noora Komulainen",
"Marta Silva (golfer)",
"Marion Ricordeau",
"Stroke play",
"International Golf Federation",
"Laura Chemarin",
"Malin Einarsson",
"Marita Engzelius",
"2008 European Ladies' Team Championship",
"Match play",
"Mireia Prat",
"stroke play",
"Europe",
"Valdís Þóra Jónsdóttir",
"Sally Watson (Scottish golfer)",
"Nicole Broch Larsen",
"Slovenia",
"Adriana Zwanck",
"Caroline Hedwall",
"Jodi Ewart",
"Caroline Martens",
"Ólafía Þórunn Kristinsdóttir",
"Sweden",
"Emma Duggleby",
"Lara Katzy",
"Nicola Rössler",
"Lucie André",
"Stephanie Kirchmaier",
"Katja Pogačar",
"Jacqueline Hedwall",
"Amanda Sträng (golfer)",
"Christine Wolf (golfer)",
"Carly Booth",
"Netherlands",
"Kylie Walker",
"Giulia Molinaro",
"Yugoslavia",
"European Ladies' Team Championship",
"Ines Diaz Negrete",
"England",
"Carlota Ciganda",
"Holly Clyburn",
"Espirito Santo Trophy",
"Thea Hoffmeister",
"Nathalie Månsson"
] |
69,406,307 |
Category:Arizona Complex League Royals players
|
This category is for players of the Arizona Complex League Royals Minor League Baseball team of the Arizona Complex League (2021–).
|
[
"Arizona Complex League",
"Arizona Complex League Royals",
"Minor League Baseball"
] |
69,406,310 |
Munawar Sultana (singer)
|
Munawar Sultana (Punjabi, ) (1925 20 May 1995) was a Pakistani radio and film singer. She is known for vocalizing the first-ever hit Pakistani film songs, including: Mainu Rab Di Soun Tere Naal Piyar Ho Gya (Film: Pheray 1949), Wastae Rab Da Tu Jaanvien Way Kabootra (Film: Dulla Bhatti 1956), and Ae Quaid-e-Azam, Tera Ehsan Hay, Ehsan (Film: Bedari 1957). She also took music lessons from the legendary film music director Master Ghulam Haider. Then she also closely collaborated with film music director Ghulam Ahmed Chishti.
==Personal life==
Munawwar Sultana was married to Ayub Romani who was a station director at Radio Pakistan, Lahore. ... (1955) (Film: Heer- Punjabi), Singer(s): Munawar Sultana & others, Music: Safdar Hussain, Poet: Hazin Qadri
Wasta e Rabb Da, Tu Javin Way Kabootra ... (1956) (Film: Dulla Bhatti - Punjabi), Singer(s): Munawar Sultana, Music: G.A. Chishti, Poet: Tufail Hoshiarpuri
O Dilla Kachya, Qarar Daya Pakkya, Kissay Day Naal Gall Na Karin
|
[
"Akhtar Sheerani",
"Punjab (British India)",
"Safdar Hussain",
"Rashid Attre",
"Urdu",
"Beqarar (1950 film)",
"Teri Yaad (film)",
"Tufail Hoshiarpuri",
"Radio Pakistan",
"Guddi Gudda",
"Ludhiana",
"Pheray",
"Ghulam Ahmed Chishti",
"Shaukat Thanvi",
"Ghulam Haider",
"Heer (1955 film)",
"Hazin Qadri",
"Punjab, Pakistan",
"Punjabi language",
"Inayat Hussain Bhatti",
"Lollywood",
"Ludhiyana",
"G.A. Chishti",
"British India",
"Master Ghulam Haider",
"silver jubilee",
"Sarfarosh (1956 film)",
"Lahore",
"Dulla Bhatti (1956 film)"
] |
69,406,323 |
Category:British Army Rangers
|
[] |
|
69,406,325 |
Weather of 2019
|
The following is a list of weather events in 2019.
==Global conditions==
2019 was Earth's second-warmest year on record, which goes back to 1880. It was the 43rd consecutive year of above-average temperatures. The year was 0.95 °C (1.71 °F) above the 20th century average, and 0.07 °C (0.04 °F) behind 2016, which was the warmest year on record. 2019 fell to the third-warmest year on record when the following year surpassed it. In 2019, Australia and the U.S. state of Alaska recorded their warmest years on record.
==Summary by weather type==
===Winter storms and cold waves===
From January 16 to 19, a winter storm crosses the United States, killing ten. Then, from January 24 into February, a cold wave brought record low temperatures to the United States. Illinois set a statewide record low temperature. Twenty-two people die as a result of the cold. Then, in mid-March, another cross country storm came to the United States, which killed a man in Colorado, left 140,000 without power in Texas, and contributed to the 2019 Midwestern U.S. floods, which caused two deaths in Nebraska and one in Iowa. Another blizzard struck the United States in April 2019. In October 2019, record cold and near-record cold come down over the Pacific Northwest and Northern Plains. In particular, with a mean statewide temperature of , Idaho realized its coldest October on record. The next major winter storm in the United States came next season, when a cold wave that kills at least seven people. The last notable blizzard is the November 26 – December 3, 2019 North American blizzard. Eight people die due to the storm, and over 80,000 people in the New York Metropolitan Area lose power.
===Floods===
In late January and early February, the Australian city of Townsville experienced record flooding when a stalled but very active monsoon trough that was bought down by Tropical Low 13U, caused an overflowing of the Ross River Dam. Approximately 3300 homes were damaged by floodwaters, and about 1500 homes rendered uninhabitable. As many as 30,000 insurance claims were filed in the aftermath of the event, with damages estimated to be $1.243 billion AUD based on insurance losses. 5 deaths were attributed to the event. The event came after Townsville experienced a drought prior to the flooding. One year prior to the floods, the dam level was at 13%, and during the floods the dam peaked at 244%, before water was released.
===Droughts, heat waves, and wildfires===
===Tornadoes===
An EF4 tornado in Havana in January 2019, becomes the strongest in Cuba since 1940. Eight people are killed and 190 are injured. Later on February 23–24, a tornado outbreak across the United States kills one and causes $1.4 billion in damages. Then, on March 3, a deadly tornado outbreak spawns 41 tornadoes. One of them, the 2019 Beauregard tornado, becomes the deadliest tornado since the 2013 Moore tornado and kills 23 people, and injures 97. On March 31, a tornado strikes Nepal. This tornado is responsible for 28 deaths and $800,000 in damage. It was later identified as the first confirmed case of a tornado in Nepal. Then, on April 13–15, 2019, a tornado outbreak in the Southeastern United States kills three. A few days later, another tornado outbreak tied for Mississippi's largest tornado outbreak, As the squall line tracked east, numerous reports of damaging wind gusts were received across the Southeast United States. and also became Virginia's third largest outbreak in a single day. In the second half of May, the United States experienced a record breaking tornado outbreak sequence. On June 29, a rare hybrid tornado struck Allen, South Dakota. A few months later, an EF3 tornado in Dallas became the costliest tornado in Texas history. In November, another tornado outbreak caused a fatality in the Southeastern US. The death was due to an EF2 in Louisiana. The last major tornado outbreak of the year occurs on December 16–17, 2019, which cause 3 deaths, plus one non-tornadic.
===Tropical cyclones===
As the year began, five tropical cyclones that formed in 2018 were still active. Cyclone Penny was moving over Queensland, Cyclone Mona was developing in the eastern Australian region, a tropical depression and a tropical disturbance was in the South Pacific, and Tropical Storm Pabuk was in the South China Sea.
In the south-west Indian Ocean, there were 14 tropical cyclones, including several powerful cyclones. Cyclone Idai struck Mozambique in March and caused widespread flooding across southeast Africa. The cyclone killed at least 1,297 people, becoming one of the deadliest recorded tropical cyclones in Africa, with a damage total of over US$2 billion, the costliest cyclone on record in the basin. In April, Cyclone Kenneth struck northern Mozambique as the most intense storm on record to hit the country. It killed 52 people in the Comoros and Mozambique. In December, Cyclone Ambali attained 10 minute winds of 220 km/h (140 mph) after the most significant rapid deepening events ever recorded in the southern hemisphere. In the Australian region, there were 15 tropical cyclones, There were 11 tropical cyclones in the South Pacific Ocean during the year.
In the north-west Pacific Ocean, there were 49 tropical cyclones that formed after Pabuk. In August, Typhoon Lekima killed 105 people and caused CN¥65.37 billion (US$9.26 billion) in damage when it struck southeastern China. Also in August, Typhoon Faxai struck Japan, causing US$10 billion in damage, followed less than two months later by Typhoon Hagibis, which hit Tokyo. Hagibis killed 98 people and caused US$15 billion in damage. In the North Indian Ocean, there were 12 tropical cyclones, including Cyclone Pabuk, which moved from the South China Sea into the Bay of Bengal in early January. Also during the season, Cyclone Fani struck eastern India, killing 89 people and causing US$8.1 billion in damage.
In the north Atlantic Ocean, there were 18 tropical cyclones and two subtropical cyclones. In September, Tropical Storm Imelda moved ashore southeastern Texas and left US$5 billion in damage after dropping of rainfall. Also in September, Hurricane Lorenzo attained 1 minute sustained winds of 160 mph (260 km/h) in the eastern Atlantic Ocean. Lorenzo capsized a ship, the Bourbon Rhode, killing 11 crew members, and the storm later struck the Azores, causing €330 million (US$367 million) in damage. In the north-east Pacific Ocean, there were 21 tropical cyclones.
===March===
March 3 – A severe and deadly tornado outbreak across the Southeastern United States results in 23 fatalities and 103 injuries from 41 tornadoes.
March 3 – An EF4 tornado during the Tornado outbreak of March 3 kills 23 people and injured 90 others and caused $1.75 million (2019 USD) in damage across its 68.73 mi (110.61 km) path.
March 31 – A deadly and powerful F4 Tornado hits Nepal which kills between 28 and 50 people and caused $800,000 (2019 USD) in damage.
April 13 – An EF3 tornado in China kills one person and injured five others.
April 13–15 – A tornado outbreak in the United States kills nine people (3 tornadic and 6 non-tornadic) and injured 65 others from 71 tornadoes.
April 17–19 – A tornado outbreak in the South Central and Southeastern United States kills four people (all non-tornadic) from 96 tornadoes.
April 21–29 – Cyclone Kenneth kills 52 people and caused $188 million (2019 USD) in damage across Seychelles, Comoros, Mayotte, northern Madagascar, northern Mozambique, southern Tanzania, and Malawi.
April 26 – May 5 – Cyclone Fani kills 89 people and caused $8.1 billion (2019 USD) in damage across Odisha, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, East India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka. Cyclone Fani became the worst tropical cyclone to strike the Indian state of Odisha since 1999.
April 30 – An EF3 wedge tornado in Oklahoma kills two people and injured nine others.
===May===
May 4–11 – Cyclone Lili caused damage Eastern Indonesia, East Timor, and Top End.
May 17–30 – A 14-day long tornado outbreak sequence in the United States kills 14 people (8 tornadic and 6 non-tornadic) and injured 288 others from 392 tornadoes.
May 27 – An EF4 tornado during the tornado outbreak sequence of May 2019 killed one person indirectly and injured 166 others. The National Weather Service issued a particularly dangerous situation and tornado emergency for the tornado as it entered Dayton, Ohio.
May 18 – June 14 – The Arkansas River Flood of 2019 kills five people and caused $3 billion (2019 USD) in damage across Arkansas and Oklahoma.
May 31 – An F2 tornado in Chile kills one person and injured 23 others.
===June===
June 8–15 – The Sand Fire of 2019 injured two people and burned 2,512 acres in California.
June 10–18 – Cyclone Vayu kills eight people and caused $140,000 (2019 USD) in damage across Maldives, India, Pakistan, and Oman.
===July===
July 3 – An EF4 Stovepipe tornado in China kills six people and injured 190 others.
July 11–19 – Hurricane Barry kills two people and caused $600 million (2019 USD) in damage across the United States and Canada. Hurricane Barry was the wettest tropical cyclone on record in Arkansas and the fourth-wettest in Louisiana.
July 14 – With a low of , Miami set a record for their warmest night on record.
July 14–21 – Tropical Storm Danas kills six people and caused $6.4 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Philippines, Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea.
July 28 – A F2 tornado in Italy kills one person. This tornado was part of a small 11 tornado outbreak in Europe.
July 30 – August 4 – Tropical Storm Wipha kills 27 people and caused $76.8 million (2019 USD) in damage across South China, Vietnam, and Laos.
July (31)–August (8) – Floods in Vadodara killed 8 people.
===August===
August 1–11 – Typhoon Francisco kills two people and caused damage across Japan, Korean Peninsula, and Russia's Far East.
August 1–29 – Floods in Karnataka, India kills 61 people with 15 missing and caused $4.95 billion (2019 USD) in damage.
August 2–14 – Typhoon Lekima, also known as Typhoon Hanna, kills 105 people and caused $9.28 billion (2019 USD) in damage across the Caroline Islands, East China, the Philippines, the Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, and Malaysia. Typhoon Lekima was the second-costliest typhoon in Chinese history.
August 8–29 – Severe Floods in Kerala, India kills 121 people.
August 24 – September 7: Hurricane Dorian kills 84 people with 245 missing and caused $5.1 billion (2019 USD) in damage across the Lesser Antilles, Puerto Rico, The Bahamas (especially the Abaco Islands and Grand Bahama), the Eastern United States (especially Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina), and Eastern Canada. Hurricane Dorian became the strongest hurricane on record to hit The Bahamas.
August 29 – An EF2 tornado in China kills eight people and injured two others.
August 29 – September 12 – Typhoon Faxai, known in Japan as Reiwa 1 Bōsō Peninsula Typhoon, kills three people and caused $10 billion (2019 USD) in damage across Wake Island and Japan.
August 31 – September 8 – Typhoon Lingling kills eight people and caused $236 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Philippines, Taiwan, China, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, and Russia.
===September===
September 3–5 – Tropical Storm Fernand kills one person and caused $11.3 million (2019 USD) in damage across Northern Mexico and South Texas.
September 13–20 – Hurricane Humberto kills two people and caused over $25 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Bahamas, the East Coast of the United States, Puerto Rico, Bermuda, and Atlantic Canada.
September 17–19 – Tropical Storm Imelda kills seven people and caused $5 billion (2019 USD) in damage across Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. Tropical Storm Imelda was the fourth-wettest tropical cyclone on record in the U.S. state of Texas.
September 22–27 – Tropical Storm Karen caused $3.53 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Windward Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, the US Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico.
September 23 – October 7 – Hurricane Lorenzo, also known as Storm Lorenzo, kills 20 people and caused $367 million (2019 USD) in damage across West Africa, Cape Verde, the Lesser Antilles, the Eastern United States, Azores, the British Isles, France, Germany, and Eastern Europe. Hurricane Lorenzo was the easternmost Category 5 Atlantic hurricane on record.
September 25–28 – The 2019 Pune Flood kills 22 people and caused damage across Pune, India.
September 27 – October 5 – Typhoon Mitag, also known as Typhoon Onyok, kills 17 people and caused $816 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Philippines, the Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, East China (particularly Zhoushan), and South Korea.
September 29 – October 1 – Tropical Storm Narda kills six people and caused $15.2 million (2019 USD) in damage across Western Mexico, the Baja California Peninsula, and the Southwestern United States.
===October===
October 1–3 – A rare, record breaking October heatwave hits the Eastern US. Some places, like Tuscaloosa, Alabama and Meridian, Mississippi, soar above for the first time in October. Several other locations in the Southeast tied or set monthly record highs on 3 consecutive days. Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Delaware, Tennessee, Maryland and Washington DC break their monthly record high for October, which was also tied in New Jersey, New York and Kentucky. The hottest state was Alabama, which hit . The Northeast's cooldown was more abrupt then the Southeast, as by October 3, temperatures in LaGuardia Airport dropped from (where the state monthly high was tied), down to . Raleigh saw their hottest temperature of the year and their latest in season temperatures above .
October 4–22 – Typhoon Hagibis, known in Japan as Reiwa 1 East Japan Typhoon, kills 98 people with 7 missing and caused $15 billion (2019 USD) in damage across the Mariana Islands, Japan, Russia, Alaska. Typhoon Hagibis became the costliest Pacific typhoon in recorded history (when unadjusted for inflation), the strongest typhoon to strike mainland Japan in decades, the deadliest typhoon to strike Japan since 1979, and one of the largest typhoons ever recorded, with a peak gale-force diameter of 825 nautical miles.
October 18–21 – Tropical Storm Nestor kills three people and caused $150 million (2019 USD) in damage across Central America, the Yucatan Peninsula, and the Southeastern United States.
October 20–22 – A tornado outbreak in the South Central and Southeastern United States caused $2 billion (2019 USD) in damage from 36 tornadoes.
October 20 – An EF 3 tornado in Texas during the Tornado outbreak of October 20–22 caused $1.55 billion (2019 USD) in damage across its 15.76 mi (25.36 km) path, making this the costliest tornado event in Texas history.
December 19–29 – Typhoon Phanfone, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Ursula kills 50 people with 55 missing and caused $67.2 million (2019 USD) in damage across the Caroline Islands and the Philippines.
December 19 – A snow squall on Interstate 80 in Pennsylvania caused 2 deaths. The same snow squall forced Interstate 390 to close as well.
December 23, 2019 – January 2, 2020 – Cyclone Sarai kills two people and caused $2.3 million (2019 USD) in damage across Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Fiji, Tonga, Niue, and the Cook Islands.
|
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69,406,328 |
File:European Ladies' Team Championship ladies' golf 2009 logo.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,330 |
Code: Pandorum
|
Sven Selka (born 23 February 1996), profesionally known as Code: Pandorum, formerly INHUMAN and Static:Reset, is a German musician, record producer, and salesman. He is credited with being one of the pioneers of "deathstep" music and the incorporation of orchestral music into dubstep. He has also done numerous remixes for other artists such as Riot Ten, Modestep, and Apashe.
== Early life ==
Sven first began music production in 5th grade, when a friend introduced him to FL Studio, and first began electronic music and heavy metal music, but when he discovered dubstep when he was 14, he started to take influence from the style. He was inspired by artists such as Borgore, Bratkilla, Mantis, and Sadhu.
== Music career ==
Later, he began producing in the early deathstep music scene under the name Static:Reset, his first official release was in 2013, an EP titled Profanity. Then, in 2014, he changed his name to Code: Pandorum with the release of the Tears of Kali EP. In 2016, he released his debut album, God LP and a later reissue called God's Army. In 2021, he changed his name from Code: Pandorum to INHUMAN with a single called "Rapture", then in 2024 he changed his name back to Code: Pandorum. Sven has also been the founder and CEO of independent label Crowsnest Audio, co-founded with Lord Swan3x and TenGraphs. Crowsnest Audio was founded on 2016 in Germany.
== Musical style ==
While his music is typically referred to as "deathstep" and he is affiliated with the deathstep music circle, Selka has stated he would not describe his music as "deathstep" due to the prevalence of melodic dubstep throughout his music, and has transitioned into more melodic dubstep after changing from Code: Pandorum to INHUMAN. His musical style is described as dark dubstep with orchestral elements such as sampling of church choir and classical music to create pre-bass drop tension. He has states that his music is akin to a horror film, and his music stages resemble plot stages: he creates a dark atmosphere (exposition), then the bass drop approaches, (building tension), and then the bass drop initiates (climax).
== Influence ==
Sven has been a large influence on dubstep music and inspired deathstep artists such as TenGraphs, Lord Swan3x, and FaceSplit. In the early 2010s, deathstep's origin, it was an underground dubstep subgenre, but Sven popularised deathstep styles into mainstream with his albums.
== Naming ==
From 2014 to 2021, Sven's alias was Code: Pandorum, a name inspired by the film of the same name, and the colon stylisation was from INHUMAN's 2013 to 2014 alias Static:Reset (on advice from fellow musician Bratkilla). There is no known meaning for the names Static:Reset or INHUMAN. In 2024, Sven changed his name back to Code: Pandorum.
== Discography ==
Code: Pandorum (formerly Static:Reset and INHUMAN) is a German DJ that has made 8 total albums, 10 EPs, 20 singles, 6 music videos, and 25 remixes.
== EPs ==
=== Released as Static:Reset ===
Profanity (2013)
Warriors (2013)
=== Released as Code: Pandorum ===
1K Likes EP (2014)
Tears of Kali (2014)
The Order (2014)
14K EP (2015)
Lunatic (2015)
Chosen (2016)
The Lost Files (2016)
Inquisition (2016)
Outclass (2018)
Penumbra (2019)
Road to AOTD (2020)
Brotherhood (2020)
Nightmare Fuel (2025)
=== Released as INHUMAN ===
DAMNATION_TAPES, VOL 1 (2022)
COLLISION I (2022)
BLACK_MASS (2022)
PANDORUM (2023)
== LPs/Studio Albums ==
=== Released as Code: Pandorum ===
GOD LP (2016)
GOD'S ARMY (2016)
The Lovecraftian Horrors (2017)
Videodrome (2018)
Art Of The Devil (2020)
La Fin Absolute Du Monde (2024)
=== Released as INHUMAN ===
ARRIVAL (2023)
RE: ARRIVAL (2024)
== Compilation albums ==
All compilation albums are released under the name Code: Pandorum, on behalf the Crowsnest Audio record label (owned and founded by Code: Pandorum).
Kill List (2016)
Crowsnest Elite #1 (2017)
Leviathan Ch. 1 (2019)
Crowsnest Elite #2 (2019)
Leviathan Ch. 2 (2020)
Crowsnest Elite #3 (2020)
Crowsnest Elite #4 (2021)
== Singles ==
=== Released as Code: Pandorum ===
"Reborn" (2014)
"Deadline" (2014) (420|002)
"Anxious" (2014) (Assasins Vol. 1)
"Lucid Dream" (2014) (Genesis)
"T-Rex" (with Warthog) (2014) (Mixture Volume 2)
"Empire Of The Dead" (with Atomize) (2014) (Heavyweight EP)
"Desjardin" (2014)
"Martyrium" (with Riot Ten) (2014)
"Crimson Peak" (with HaXim) (2015)
"Captain Spaulding" (2015) (PRIME Audio 6K Likes EP)
"Extinction" (2015) (Mixture Volume 3)
"Witchcraft" (with Mits) (2015)
"Shibito" (2015)
"Peoples Temple" (2015) (Return Of The Future)
"Chosen" (2016) (GOD LP)
"Lazarus" (2016)
"Jason" (2016)
"Khaimera" (2016) (Kill List Chapter 2)
"Syndrome" (with Nasko) (2016) (MONXX 10K Followers Compilation)
"Abduction" (with Rix Cena) (2016)
"Senua" (2017) (Crownest Elite #1)
"Bloodshock" (2017) (Savage Selects Vol. 2)
"Pity" (with Oolacile) (2017)
"FVCK RIDDIM" (with MVRDA) (2017)
"Krampus Returns" (2017)
"The Neon Demon" (2017)
"Punish" (2018) (Fresh Blood Vol. 4)
"Polaroid" (2018) (Prime 100)
"Multitude" (2018) (Stay Rad Vol. 1)
"Snuff Pt. 2" (2018) (Syndicate Vol. 2)
"Run It" (2018)
"Crusader" (2018) (Without God: Season Four)
"Monxxed" (2019) (Crownest Elite #2)
"The Devils" (2019)
"Divebomb" (with Brain Palace) (2019) (Syndicate Vol. 3)
"Panik" (with FaceSplit) (2019) (Knights Of The Round Table Vol. 3)
"Sweet Dreams" (featuring SnoWhite) (2019)
"Art Of The Devil" (2020) (Art Of The Devil)
"Purpose" (2020) (Art Of The Devil)
"Fade To Black" (featuring Vulgatron) (2020) (Art Of The Devil)
"Streets Of Rage" (featuring Kid Bookie) (2020) (Art Of The Devil)
"Eclipse" (featuring SnoWhite) (2020) (Art Of The Devil)
"Sadako" (2020) (Subsidia Night Vol. 1)
"Nigeru" (2020) (Syndicate Vol. 4)
"Event Horizon" (2020)
"Overlord" (with AXEN) (2020) (Crownest Elite #3)
"Everyone's the Same" (with Qoiet) (2020) (Crownest Elite #3)
"Burn" (with Mantis) (2020) (Fresh Blood: Royal Blood)
"Colossus" (with FaceSplit and Adrift) (2020) (Subsidia Dusk Vol. 2)
"The Executioner" (featuring Vulgatron) (2021)
"Death Funk" (with Qoiet) (2024)
"estrondo da morte" (with Qoiet) (2024)
"Stack That" (with Virus Syndicate) (2024) (Bad Medic vs Crownest)
"Violence" (featuring Original God) (2024) (Torture Torn II)
"Nihilist" (featuring Sinizter) (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Cement Garden" (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Body of Decay" (with IBEX) (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Tulpa" (with Dealer Of Happiness featuring flowanastasia) (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Klaubauf" (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Broken Mirror" (with MARTVR) (2024) (La Fin Absolue Du Monde)
"Last Rite (Looking Glass)" (2025)
"Paint It Red" (with Qoiet and Snails) (2024)
=== Released as INHUMAN ===
"Rapture" (with OMAS featuring Les Gold, and SnoWhite) (2021) (Subsidia Dusk Vol. 4)
"VAGABOND" (2021)
"Quicksand" (featuring The Anix) (2021)
"CYCLES" (with Caster) (2021) (Crownest Elite #4)
"WAR" (featuring The Well Runs Red) (2022) (COLLISION I)
"BOW_DOWN" (with Qoiet) (2022) (COLLISION I)
"DEATHLIST" (featuring GHØSTKID) (2022) (COLLISION I)
"VENGEANCE" (with Hungry Lights) (2022) (COLLISION I)
"BODY_HARVEST" (2022)
"SENTINEL" (2022)
"POSSESOR" (with Disinety) (2023) (Torture Torn)
"AUGMENTED" (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"NEW_WORLD" (featuring Wasiu) (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"ETERNITY" (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"PRISON" (featuring SPYDR FÆ) (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"CUTSCENE" (with Qoiet) (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"ANTIMATTER" (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"SOMERSET" (with Orphan Planet) (2023) (ARRIVAL)
"HAVEN" (with Earhead) (2023) (Kannibals at the Beach Vol. 2)
"ELDRITCH" (with MUERTE) (2023) (CROWSNEST ELITE V)
"PROPHET" (2023) (PANDORUM)
"HALFBLOOD" (2023) (PANDORUM)
"SCARLET" (2023) (PANDORUM)
== Music videos ==
All music videos have been released under the Code:Pandorum name.
"Art of the Devil" (2020)
"Purpose" (2020)
"Fade to Black" (featuring Vulgatron) (2020)
"Streets Of Rage" (featuring Kid Bookie) (2020)
"Eclipse" (featuring SnoWhite) (2020)
"Existence" (2020)
"The Executioner" (featuring Vulgatron) (2021)
"Nihilist" (featuring Sinizter) (2024)
"Cement Garden" (2024)
"Body of Decay" (with IBEX) (2024)
"Tulpa" (with Dealer Of Happiness featuring flowanastasia) (2024)
"Klaubauf" (2024)
"Broken Mirror" (with MARTVR) (2024)
|
[
"Germany",
"Apashe",
"Code: Pandorum",
"Foreign Beggars",
"deathstep",
"Anrochte",
"Atomize",
"HaXim",
"North Rhine-Westphalia",
"Oolacile",
"classical music",
"Original God",
"Excision (musician)",
"Drop (music)",
"Rix Cena",
"Sampling (music)",
"Snails (DJ)",
"Classical music",
"Primary school",
"Extended play",
"FL Studio",
"church choir",
"Soest, Germany",
"Warthog",
"Crowsnest Audio",
"Virus Syndicate",
"Heavy metal music",
"God LP",
"Pandorum",
"Climax (narrative)",
"music video",
"Mits",
"Riot Ten",
"Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)",
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"Plot (narrative)",
"Nasko",
"Remix",
"Exposition (narrative)",
"Dramatic structure",
"horror film",
"Single (music)",
"album",
"Modestep",
"Borgore",
"Qoiet",
"dubstep"
] |
69,406,333 |
55:15 Never Too Late
|
55:15 Never Too Late is a 2021 Thai television series starring Korapat Kirdpan (Nanon), Kanyarat Ruangrung (Piploy), Thanawat Rattanakitpaisan (Khaotung), Kay Lertsittichai, Benyapa Jeenprasom (View), Vasu Sangsingkeo (Jeep), Sinjai Plengpanich (Nok), Songsit Roongnophakunsri (Kob), Amarin Nitibhon and Kara Polasit.
Directed by Saranyu Jiralaksanakul, produced by Thai company GMMTV and distributed exclusively by Disney+ Hotstar for the first time, this series is one of the sixteen television series of the aforementioned production company for 2021 during their "GMMTV 2021: The New Decade Begins" event on 3 December 2020. The series premiered on Hotstar on 6 December 2021 meanwhile, it will premiered on GMM 25 on 5 January 2022 airing every Wednesdays and Thursdays at 20:30 ICT (8:30 pm) replacing Baker Boys' timeslot on GMM25. The official trailer of the series was released on 25 November 2021 by GMMTV, along with its official main casts and characters.
== Synopsis ==
'55:15 Never Too Late' follows 5 characters, aged 55, who wake up one day as their 15 year old selves. San, a professional voice actor; Jaya, a popular singer who gained popularity during the 1980s; Paul, owner of a bar; Amonthep a former boxer who now owns a boxing ring center, and Jarunee, a high school teacher. The five characters have a second chance to pursue their dreams and aspirations by redoing their lives at the age of 15.
Will the five figure out what turned them back to 15 years old? and will they change back to 55?
== Casts and characters ==
=== Main ===
Korapat Kirdpan (Nanon) as San
Vasu Sangsingkeo (Jeep) as adult San
Kanyarat Ruangrung (Piploy) as Jaya
Sinjai Plengpanich (Nok) as adult Jaya
Thanawat Rattanakitpaisan (Khaotung) as Songpol
Songsit Roongnophakunsri (Kob) as adult Songpol
Kay Lertsittichai as Amornthep
Amarin Nitibhon as adult Amornthep
Benyapa Jeenprasom (View) as Jarunee
Kara Polasit as adult Jarunee
=== Supporting ===
Grace Mahadumrongkul as adult Prim
Krissana Sreadthatamrong (Tu)
Anusorn Maneeted (Yong) as Mathee
Luckana Siriwong (Bim)
Anuwan Jiranantawat
Michael Shaowanasai
Pahun Jiyacharoen (Marc)
Weerayut Chansook (Arm) as Bomb
Tawinan Anukoolprasert (Sea) as Pangpond
Pawin Kulkaranyawich (Win) as Pipu
Sureeyares Yakares (Pringkhing) as Noinae
Preeyaphat Lawsuwansiri (Earn) as Joom
Natthisarat Phongphanumaspaisarn (Mind)
Napasorn Weerayuttvilai (Puimek) as younger Prim
Praekwan Phongskul (Bimbeam) as Kiki
Natthachai Sirinanthachot (Birth)
=== Guest ===
Sahaphap Wongratch (Mix) as Himself
Pirapat Watthanasetsiri (Earth) as Himself
== Soundtracks ==
== Reception ==
=== Thailand television ratings ===
In the table below, represents the lowest ratings and represents the highest ratings.
Based on the average audience share per episode.
|
[
"Nielsen ratings",
"Sinjai Plengpanich",
"Weerayut Chansook",
"UTC+07:00",
"Baker Boys (Thai TV series)",
"Fiction",
"Michael Shaowanasai",
"GMM 25",
"GMM25",
"GMMTV Records",
"GMMTV",
"Sahaphap Wongratch",
"Benyapa Jeenprasom",
"Kay Lertsittichai",
"Tawinan Anukoolprasert",
"Hotstar",
"Royal Thai General System of Transcription",
"Coming of age",
"Thanawat Rattanakitpaisan",
"Pirapat Watthanasetsiri",
"Science fiction",
"Napasorn Weerayuttvilai",
"Korapat Kirdpan",
"Songsit Roongnophakunsri",
"Vasu Sangsingkeo"
] |
69,406,347 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Malaysia/Newsroom/Newsletter/December 2021
|
[
"WP:DYK",
"WP:STUB",
"Economy of Sarawak",
"Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Malaysia",
"Christmas",
"WP:FA",
"WP:GA",
"December 2021 Malaysian floods"
] |
|
69,406,348 |
Stéphane Matheu
|
Stéphane Matheu (born 27 April 1973) is a French former professional tennis player.
A left-handed player, Matheu was active on the professional tour in the 1990s and reached a career best singles world ranking of 286. He made his only ATP Tour main draw appearances as a qualifier at the 1994 Dutch Open.
Matheu is now involved in professional poker as a team manager.
==ITF Futures titles==
===Doubles: (3)===
|
[
"Rodez",
"professional poker",
"RMC (France)",
"Tommi Lenho",
"1995 Australian Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"1995 French Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"Alexandre Simoni",
"Wim Neefs",
"tennis",
"Olivier Rochus",
"Offenbach am Main",
"1994 Dutch Open (tennis)",
"Lassi Ketola",
"Vierumäki",
"Julien Cuaz",
"Janne Ojala",
"ATP Tour",
"1994 US Open – Men's singles qualifying",
"Olivier Morel (tennis)"
] |
69,406,352 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Daniel Belton
|
===:Daniel Belton===
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was speedy keep. Nomination withdrawn. (non-admin closure) Mlb96 (talk) 03:17, 2 December 2021 (UTC)
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Artist doesn't seem to meet WP:ANYBIO- coverage is largely non-independent sources and interview-based articles. MrsSnoozyTurtle 06:03, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Withdrawn by nominator. Thank you for adding the extra sources. Regards, MrsSnoozyTurtle 21:04, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep. I have added some awards and fellowships I missed in the initial write-up, so please have another look. But honestly, deleting a bio of Daniel Belton claiming he is not notable would be embarrassing. If I have failed to demonstrate his notability then I am happy to hear what can be improved, but I think your assessment is off the mark. He is an Arts Laureate, which is pretty much as good as it gets for recognition of creatives in New Zealand (and by that alone he meets WP:ANYBIO "1. The person has received a well-known and significant award or honor". He received a choreographic scholarship of which they award only one annually in the entire country. His work is recognised internationally, and that is supported by his Arts Laureate bio and his New Zealand School of Dance bio, which are independent of him. DrThneed (talk) 06:52, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Actors and filmmakers-related deletion discussions. Engr. Smitty Werben 07:00, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Dance-related deletion discussions. Engr. Smitty Werben 07:00, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of New Zealand-related deletion discussions. Engr. Smitty Werben 07:00, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep. A Laureate Award from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand is, as DrThneed says, a well-known and significant award (probably one of the most significant awards for artists in New Zealand). Having had a quick look on my phone these additional sources might also be added (if I've missed them in the article, apologies): [https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/new-fellow-fuses-dance-and-arts-with-science/ZJZ4YQRV2AAPUBVRPVB4TOH4WQ/. And the National Library lists a number of promising further sources that would be accessible through NZ libraries: . Cheers, Chocmilk03 (talk) 08:56, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Thanks Chocmilk03, have added the first two and will look up the library ones next time I get the chance. DrThneed (talk) 09:50, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep The Arts Laureate alone brings this over the line; those people are inherently notable. Schwede66 09:26, 1 December 2021 (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.
|
[
"Arts Foundation of New Zealand",
"Daniel Belton",
"WP:ANYBIO"
] |
69,406,368 |
Category:Bulgarian Sephardi Jews
|
[] |
|
69,406,372 |
Category:Sephardi Jewish culture in Bulgaria
|
[] |
|
69,406,376 |
2011 (song)
|
"2011" is a song by the Australian pop rock band, 5 Seconds of Summer. It was released on 3 December 2021 independently in partnership with BMG. The song celebrates their 10-year anniversary as a group.
==Background==
"2011" was written by Michael Clifford, Calum Hood and Nick Long while production was handled by John Feldmann and co-produced by Clifford. The group released the single in celebration of their 10-year anniversary as a band. They stated that the song is "a homage to the past, and a nod to what we have in store for the future."
==Reception==
"2011" was met with positive reviews from music critics. Anissa Sanchez of Euphoria Magazine stated that the song, "opens straight away with wistful lyrics that center on the theme of reminiscence." She also added, "the track fuses together the band’s early punk-rock roots with their more recent pop sound." Upon the live performance, the band stated that they wanted to create "something that captures the pursuit of creation, the love of the relationship we have with our fans and the endless boundary of what it means to be in a band."
Musicians
Michael Clifford – lead vocals, lead guitar, composer, instrumentation, producer, programming
Calum Hood – lead vocals, bass, composer
Luke Hemmings – rhythm guitar, backing vocals
Ashton Irwin – backing vocals, drums
Production
Neal Avron – engineering
John Feldmann – instrumentation, producer, programming
Chris Gehringer – engineering
Nick Long – composer
Dylan McLean – engineering, producer
Scott Skrzynski – mixing assistant
Scot Stewart – engineering, producer
==Charts==
|
[
"AllMusic",
"NME",
"Australian Independent Record Labels Association",
"5 Seconds of Summer",
"AbsolutePunk",
"BMG Rights Management",
"Complete Mess",
"Apple Music",
"Pop punk",
"Luke Hemmings",
"Calum Hood",
"Ashton Irwin",
"Wildflower (5 Seconds of Summer song)",
"pop rock",
"Rolling Stone Australia",
"John Feldmann",
"Recorded Music NZ",
"Michael Clifford (musician)"
] |
69,406,378 |
Juwann Bushell-Beatty
|
Juwann Bushell-Beatty (born June 18, 1996) is an American professional football offensive tackle for the St. Louis Battlehawks of the United Football League (UFL). He played college football at Michigan. He had previous stints with the Washington Redskins, Dallas Cowboys, and Carolina Panthers of the National Football League (NFL), Tampa Bay Bandits of the XFL, and the Ottawa Redblacks of the Canadian Football League (CFL).
== College career ==
Bushell-Beatty played college football for the Michigan Wolverines football team from 2014 to 2018. During his freshman season in 2014 he did not see any action. During his sophomore season in 2015 he played in four games as a reserve offensive lineman. During his junior season in 2016 he appeared in eight games including one start at left tackle. During his senior season in 2017 he appeared in 12 games, including seven starts at right tackle. During his fifth-year senior season in 2018 he started 11 games at right tackle, and earned All-Big Ten honorable mention by both the coaches and media.
== Professional career ==
=== Washington Redskins ===
After going undrafted in the 2019 NFL draft, Bushell-Beatty signed with Washington Redskins as an undrafted free agent on April 30, 2019. He was waived by the Redskins on May 28, 2019.
=== Dallas Cowboys ===
On August 7, 2019, Bushell-Beatty was signed by the Dallas Cowboys. He was waived by the Cowboys on August 31, 2019.
=== St. Louis Battlehawks ===
Bushell-Beatty was drafted 67th overall by the St. Louis Battlehawks in the 2020 XFL Draft. On January 21, 2020, he was traded to the Houston Roughnecks, along with Charles James, in exchange for Robert Nelson. He had his contract terminated when the league suspended operations on April 10, 2020.
=== Carolina Panthers ===
On May 1, 2020, Bushell-Beatty signed with the Carolina Panthers. He was waived by the Panthers on July 31, 2020.
=== Ottawa Redblacks ===
On March 3, 2021, Bushell-Beatty signed with the Ottawa Redblacks of the Canadian Football League (CFL). He dressed for six games during 2021 season but was ultimately not re-signed.
=== Tampa Bay Bandits ===
On February 22, 2022, Bushell-Beatty was drafted 58th overall by the Tampa Bay Bandits in the 2022 USFL draft. He was transferred to the team's inactive roster on May 6, 2022, with an illness. He was moved back to the active roster on May 11.
=== St. Louis Battlehawks (second stint) ===
On January 1, 2023, Bushell-Beatty was selected by the St. Louis Battlehawks in the first round of the 2023 XFL supplemental draft. He re–signed with the team on January 22, 2024, and again on August 26.
|
[
"Carolina Panthers",
"2016 Michigan Wolverines football team",
"United Football League (2024)",
"Paramus, New Jersey",
"2022 USFL draft",
"Canadian Football League",
"Tackle (gridiron football position)",
"Ottawa Redblacks",
"2020 XFL Draft",
"2018 Michigan Wolverines football team",
"Paramus Catholic High School",
"Robert Nelson (defensive back)",
"2014 Michigan Wolverines football team",
"college football",
"Dallas Cowboys",
"2018 All-Big Ten Conference football team",
"Houston Roughnecks (2020)",
"Washington Commanders",
"Michigan Wolverines football",
"2015 Michigan Wolverines football team",
"National Football League",
"2019 NFL draft",
"2017 Michigan Wolverines football team",
"Tampa Bay Bandits (2022)",
"American football",
"St. Louis Battlehawks",
"Washington Redskins",
"Charles James (American football)"
] |
69,406,385 |
File:Munawar Sultana (singer).jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,391 |
Chydenia
|
{{Infobox shopping mall
| name = Chydenia Shopping Center
| native_name = Kauppakeskus Chydenia
| native_name_lang = fi
| logo =
| logo_width =
| image = Kauppakeskus Chydenia.jpg
| image_width = 275px
| caption = The entrance of Chydenia
| location = Kokkola, Finland
| coordinates =
| address =
| opening_date = 2006
| closing_date =
| developer =
| manager =
| owner = Agore KiinteistötAberdeen European Balanced Property FundSamla Capital
| architect =
| number_of_stores = 45 The name of the shopping center refers to Anders Chydenius (1729–1803), who mainly influenced in Kokkola.
The first part of Chydenia has three floors, the second part two and the third six, two of which are in business use. There are almost 300 parking spaces in the shopping center. Parking is free in parking lots when using the parking disc. About 2 million people visit Chydenia every year.
Several stores in Chydenia include Suomalainen Kirjakauppa, H&M, Dressmann, Specsavers, Subway, Hesburger and Espresso House.
|
[
"Kokkola railway station",
"Hesburger",
"Kokkola",
"parking disc",
"Central Ostrobothnia",
"Dressmann",
"Specsavers",
"Subway (restaurant)",
"H&M",
"Keskipohjanmaa",
"Suomalainen Kirjakauppa",
"parking space",
"Anders Chydenius",
"YLE",
"Finland",
"shopping mall",
"Espresso House"
] |
69,406,395 |
Category:Bulgarian Zionists
|
[] |
|
69,406,398 |
Pafolacianine
|
phenoxy)-3-{(2E)-2-[3,3-dimethyl-5-sulfo-1-(4-sulfobutyl)-1,3-dihydro-2H-indol-2-ylidene]ethylidene}-1-cyclohexen-1-yl]vinyl}-3,3-dimethyl-1-(4-sulfobutyl)-3H-indolium-5-sulfonate
| C=61 | H=67 | N=9 | O=17 | S=4
| SMILES = CC1(C2=C(C=CC(=C2)S(=O)(=O)[O-])[N+](=C1C=CC3=C(C(=CC=C4C(C5=C(N4CCCCS(=O)(=O)O)C=CC(=C5)S(=O)(=O)O)(C)C)CCC3)OC6=CC=C(C=C6)CC(C(=O)O)NC(=O)C7=CC=C(C=C7)NCC8=CN=C9C(=N8)C(=O)NC(=N9)N)CCCCS(=O)(=O)O)C
| StdInChI = 1S/C61H67N9O17S4/c1-60(2)46-33-44(90(81,82)83)22-24-49(46)69(28-5-7-30-88(75,76)77)51(60)26-16-38-10-9-11-39(17-27-52-61(3,4)47-34-45(91(84,85)86)23-25-50(47)70(52)29-6-8-31-89(78,79)80)54(38)87-43-20-12-37(13-21-43)32-48(58(73)74)66-56(71)40-14-18-41(19-15-40)63-35-42-36-64-55-53(65-42)57(72)68-59(62)67-55/h12-27,33-34,36,48H,5-11,28-32,35H2,1-4H3,(H9-,62,63,64,66,67,68,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84,85,86)/t48-/m0/s1
| StdInChIKey = PDXNSXLPXJFETD-DYVQZXGMSA-N
| density =
| density_notes =
| melting_point =
| melting_high =
| melting_notes =
| boiling_point =
| boiling_notes =
| solubility =
| sol_units =
| specific_rotation =
}}
Pafolacianine, sold under the brand name Cytalux, is an optical imaging agent used in fluorescence-guided surgery. Pafolacianine is a fluorescent medication that binds to folate receptor (FR)-expressing cells.
== Medical uses ==
Pafolacianine is indicated as an adjunct for intraoperative identification of malignant lesions in people with ovarian cancer. The safety and effectiveness of pafolacianine was evaluated in a randomized, multi-center, open-label study of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer or with high clinical suspicion of ovarian cancer who were scheduled to undergo surgery.]]
|
[
"folate receptor",
"orphan drug",
"Fast track (FDA)",
"priority review",
"On Target Laboratories",
"Food and Drug Administration",
"Intravenous",
"Purdue University",
"Molecular imaging",
"Fluorescence image-guided surgery",
"first-in-class medication",
"Fluorescence",
"Indication (medicine)",
"ovarian cancer"
] |
69,406,426 |
Rauf Arifoğlu
|
Rauf Arif oghlu Abbasov (born July 23, 1966, Yuxarı Öysüzlü, Tovuz District), known as Rauf Arifoğlu, is an Azerbaijani journalist. He is the founder and head of the Yeni Musavat Media Group. In 1988, he joined the national liberation movement. In 1989, he unofficially published "Birlik Magazine". In 1989, he founded the "Yeni Musavat" (New Equality) newspaper. At the same time, he founded the Azerbaijan National Democratic New Musavat Party (ANDNMP). In 1992, he and several members of the Popular Front of Azerbaijan re-established the Musavat Party (Equality Party), and AMDNMP joined Musavat. At different times he was a member of the Divan (Supreme body) of Musavat, and deputy chairman. He resigned from the membership of the party on July 15, 2015.
Rauf Arifoğlu was a candidate for the parliamentary elections several times. He was imprisoned several times for his political activities. And he was recognized as a political prisoner by many international organizations. His last parliamentary candidacy was controversial. All Azerbaijani media wrote about this right. The election in that region was cancelled.
== Life ==
Rauf Arif oghlu Abbasov was born on July 23, 1966, in Yuxarı Öysüzlü village of Tovuz District. In 1983, he graduated from the high school of this village. In 1983–1988 he graduated from the Azerbaijan Institute of Technology majoring in engineering technologist, and in 1994–1996 he graduated from the Faculty of World Politics and Economics of Western University majoring in political science.
== Socio-political activity ==
Arifoğlu joined the Azerbaijan National Freedom Movement in 1988. In late 1989, he unofficially published "Birlik Magazine". On November 10, 1989, he founded the "Yeni Musavat" newspaper. At the same time, he was one of the five founders of the Azerbaijan National Democratic New Musavat Party (AMDP "New Musavat"), the organization's secretary for ideological issues. The Central Office of the Party and the secret editorial office of the "Yeni Musavat" newspaper were moved to Ganja from December 1989 to the end of 1991.
On July 22, 2015, he was awarded the honorary title of Honored Journalist by the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev for his activities in the field of journalism. On May 27, 2019, he was awarded the anniversary medal "100th anniversary of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic" by another presidential decree.
On July 27, 2016, he was awarded the Mirza Jalil Higher Media Award.
In July 2017, he was awarded the Seyid Jafar Peshevari Award by the Congress of South Azerbaijan.
He was awarded the "Memorial Medal" by the Congress of European Azerbaijanis on July 22, 2020.
In addition, Arifoğlu was awarded certificates and plaques by a number of Turkish and Azerbaijani NGOs.
== Family ==
He is married and has 3 children.
|
[
"Yuxarı Öysüzlü",
"Eynulla Fatullayev",
"internet television",
"Jumhuriyat (newspaper)",
"Azerbaijan",
"Dunya (magazine)",
"Todan",
"Telegram (software)",
"Azerbaijan Institute of Technology",
"Soviet–Afghan War",
"Popular Front of Azerbaijan",
"Tovuz District",
"Sahil baghi",
"Yeni Musavat",
"Azerbaijanis",
"Çaykənd, Goygol",
"Instagram",
"Ganja, Azerbaijan",
"Western Caspian University",
"Supreme Media Award (Azerbaijan)",
"Azerbaijani language",
"BBC News",
"Abulfaz Elchibey",
"Azerbaijan National Center (Turkey)",
"Elmar Huseynov",
"Musavat Party",
"Yeni Turan (newspaper)",
"Press Council of Azerbaijan",
"Azerbaijan Democratic Republic 100th anniversary medal",
"Ankara",
"Isa Gambarov",
"Birlik Magazine",
"National Revival Day",
"Yeni Musavat Media Group",
"Russian-language",
"Goygol District"
] |
69,406,435 |
2021 Garaheybat Mil Mi-17 crash
|
The Garaheybat Mil Mi-17 crash () occurred on 30 November 2021, during military drills of Azerbaijani State Border Service (SBS) Mil Mi-17 helicopter in the Garaheybat training zone located in the Khizi District. Fourteen people were killed and two were injured in the helicopter crash. This was the largest aircraft crash in the history of Azerbaijan's law enforcement agencies.
Immediately after the accident, the representatives of the SBS and the Prosecutor General's Office arrived at scene. An investigation was launched under the leadership of Deputy Chief of the Prosecutor General's Office Elchin Mammadov. The cause of the accident is still being investigated.
President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and Vice President Mehriban Aliyeva, President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and other political figures in the country, foreign embassies in Azerbaijan, as well as international organizations expressed condolences to the victims.
== Background ==
The deadliest helicopter crash in the history of Azerbaijan took place on 20 November 1991, near Karakend, in Khojavend District, which resulted in the deaths of 22 people, including senior government officials. Furthermore, on 24 July 2019, an Azerbaijani Air Force MIG-29 aircraft carrying out drills suddenly disappeared from radars. The pilot, Lieutenant Colonel Rashad Atakishiyev, went missing as the plane crashed into the Caspian Sea. His body was recovered after a long-running search.
== Crash ==
On 30 November 2021, at about 10:40 local time, an Azerbaijani State Border Service Mil Mi-17 helicopter took off from the Sangachal airfield and crashed during drills at the Garaheybat training zone, located within the Khizi District. The head of the State Border Service of Azerbaijan, Elchin Guliyev, stated that the pilot was experienced and that he was a participant in the First Karabakh War, that the helicopter was almost new and had recently been repaired. Guliyev stated that the flight recorder of the helicopter was found, adding that no outside forces were involved in the incident.
According to preliminary reports, two colonels, three majors, four captains, two lieutenants and a civilian contractor were killed, while a colonel and a captain were injured in the crash.
== Aftermath ==
Immediately after the incident, the representatives of the State Border Service and the Prosecutor General's Office arrived at scene. A criminal case under Article 352.2 of the Criminal Code (violation of flight or flight preparation rules caused the death of two or more people through negligence) and other articles was initiated by the Prosecutor General's Office and the investigation was taken under special control by the Prosecutor General. The investigation team investigating the helicopter crash was headed by Deputy Chief of the Investigation Department of the Prosecutor General's Office Elchin Mammadov. The cause of the accident was not immediately clear. The bodies of the victims were brought to the Forensic Medical Expertise and Pathological Anatomy Association of the Ministry of Health in Baku, and after examination they were handed over to their families.
The head of the State Border Service of Azerbaijan Elchin Guliyev stated that the soldiers died in the accident would be given the status of "martyrs", noting that President Ilham Aliyev instructed to clarify the details of the incident, bury the fallen and do everything necessary to treat the wounded. Guliyev said he spoke on the phone with the two servicemen injured in the accident and that their state was normal.
Azerbaijan initially did not release the names of the victims, in accordance with the practice of most countries, which do not release the names until the victims' closest relatives have been alerted. The lack of more detailed information as the time passed since the incident, and the fact that the accident occurred immediately after the meetings in Ashgabat and Sochi, raised questions and misinformation in the Azerbaijani public.
President of Azerbaijan along with several domestic and foreign officials mourned the loss and shared condolence messages.
|
[
"Recep Tayyip Erdoğan",
"Caspian Sea",
"1991 Azerbaijani Mil Mi-8 shootdown",
"Prosecutor General's Office of Azerbaijan",
"Mil Mi-17",
"Azerbaijani Air Forces",
"First Nagorno-Karabakh War",
"eurasianet",
"Sochi",
"HaberTürk",
"Zardusht Alizadeh",
"Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty",
"Ilham Aliyev",
"Khizi District",
"Ashgabat",
"President of Turkey",
"Khojavend District",
"Mehriban Aliyeva",
"flight recorder",
"Reuters",
"Martyr",
"Karakend",
"Vice President of Azerbaijan",
"Elchin Guliyev",
"President of Azerbaijan",
"State Border Service (Azerbaijan)",
"Mikoyan MiG-29",
"Associated Press",
"Sanqaçal"
] |
69,406,437 |
Wikipedia:Meetup/Melbourne/42
|
When: 5:30 - 7:00 PM, Friday 10 December, 2021
Where: Diksteins (upstairs) at 433 Little Collins Street (Corner Bank Place) Melbourne equi-distant from Flinders St & Southern Cross stations
Why: Meet in person, celebrate the end of 2021, catch up on news, and plans for 2022. Come for a drink, pizza or a meal.
How: Following local COVID-Safe guidelines.
== Attendees ==
Pru.mitchell (talk) 06:24, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
James Gaunt --Jimmyjrg (talk) 07:27, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Amanda Lawrence 00:34, 5 December 2021 (UTC)
|
[] |
69,406,449 |
Nancy González (politician)
|
Nancy Susana González (born 10 February 1961) is an Argentine politician, who was a National Senator for Chubut from 2015 to 2021 and a National Deputy from 2006 to 2013. She belongs to the Justicialist Party.
==Early and personal life==
González was born on 10 February 1961 in Puerto Madryn, Chubut. She worked as the director of a nursing home in her hometown between 1991 and 2003. She is married to Armando Santiago Bazán and has two children.
==Political career==
In 2003, González was appointed Secretary of Social Action of Puerto Madryn by then-mayor Carlos Eliceche. She was elected in her own right in the 2009 legislative election, as the second candidate in the Front for Victory list.
In the 2015 general election, González was the second candidate in the FPV list to the National Senate, behind Juan Mario Pais. With 42.51% of the vote, the FPV was the most voted alliance in the province, and both Pais and González were elected for the majority as per the limited voting system used for the Argentine upper house. González formed part of the Front for Victory bloc, remaining in it even after most of its members broke away and formed the Argentina Federal bloc following the 2017 legislative election. After the 2019 general election, she formed part of the Frente de Todos bloc alongside nearly all other peronist senators: this meant all three senators from Chubut for the 2015–2021 term (González, Pais, and Luenzo) all formed part of the same bloc.
As senator, González formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Women's Affairs, Education and Culture, Labour and Social Prevision, Population and Human Development, Health, and Constitutional Affairs, and presided the commission on National Defense.
González did not stand for re-election in 2021, and her term expired on 10 December 2021.
|
[
"Roman Catholicism",
"Parliamentary group",
"Citizen's Unity",
"Abortion in Argentina",
"El Cronista",
"Justicialist Party",
"2017 Argentine legislative election",
"Frente de Todos (2019 coalition)",
"limited voting",
"Juan Mario Pais",
"Federal Peronism",
"Alfredo Luenzo",
"2019 Argentine general election",
"Chubut Province",
"Puerto Madryn",
"Argentine Senate",
"2009 Argentine legislative election",
"Perfil",
"2005 Argentine legislative election",
"Infobae",
"2021 Argentine legislative election",
"La Voz del Interior",
"Front for Victory",
"2015 Argentine general election",
"Página/12",
"Todo Noticias",
"Argentine Chamber of Deputies",
"Frente de Todos",
"Voluntary Termination of Pregnancy Bill (Argentina)"
] |
69,406,478 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Danielle Steel's A Perfect Stranger
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep (withdrawn). Geschichte (talk) 21:07, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
===:Danielle Steel's A Perfect Stranger===
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
I found no significant coverage and the article is only sourced to IMDb. SL93 (talk) 06:32, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Film-related deletion discussions. SL93 (talk) 06:32, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep Acceptable stub; film was produced by and aired on a national broadcast network based on a popular book. Nate • (chatter) 09:29, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Comment: I found some Newspaper.com sources that could be usable. I'm still waiting for my subscription to be approved, so can someone check these out in the meantime? I found one that was definitely usable and added it, if you could check to see if it's a review or if it's coverage about the film's production. ([https://www.newspapers.com/image/440669809/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1, [https://www.newspapers.com/image/463880018/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1) ReaderofthePack(formerly Tokyogirl79) (。◕‿◕。) 12:42, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
More: [https://www.newspapers.com/image/545526445/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1, [https://www.newspapers.com/image/120102534/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1, [https://www.newspapers.com/image/354379515/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1, [https://www.newspapers.com/image/218678871/?terms=%22Perfect%20Stranger%22%20Robert%20Urich%20steel&match=1) ReaderofthePack(formerly Tokyogirl79) (。◕‿◕。) 12:44, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Keep per reviews found by ReaderofthePack. DonaldD23 talk to me 13:39, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Withdraw: Reviews look good. SL93 (talk) 13:43, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of California-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 16:34, 1 December 2021 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Television-related deletion discussions. CAPTAIN RAJU(T) 16:34, 1 December 2021 (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.
|
[
"Danielle Steel's A Perfect Stranger"
] |
69,406,481 |
Me or Sum
|
"Me or Sum" is a song by American rapper Nardo Wick featuring fellow American rappers Future and Lil Baby. It was released on November 29, 2021 as the second single from Wick's debut studio album Who Is Nardo Wick? (2021). The song was produced by Z3N and DVLP.
==Composition and lyrics==
In the song, the three artists rap about each of their luxurious lifestyles and experiences and attracting women as a result. Particularly, they mention how their romantic partners think they are "me or something". Future delivers the first verse; the beat then switches, shifting to a more aggressive tone, and Future's verse is followed by Nardo Wick and Lil Baby's verses.
==Music video==
An official music video for the song was released on February 3, 2022. The video was directed by MadeByJames and is set in the Roaring Twenties. It starts with Future rapping in a bedroom Nardo Wick raps in a room (described as a Depression-era juke joint) filled with individuals gambling, drinking and smoking, as well as women. The three rappers reunite and celebrate their success in the end.
| 41
|}
==Certifications==
==Release history==
|
[
"HipHopDX",
"Lil Baby",
"RCA Records",
"Depression-era",
"HotNewHipHop",
"DVLP",
"Uproxx",
"Trap music",
"Complex Networks",
"Roaring Twenties",
"Hip hop music",
"Nardo Wick",
"Rhythmic contemporary",
"Future (rapper)",
"Too Easy",
"juke joint",
"Revolt (TV network)",
"Apple Music",
"Who Is Nardo Wick?",
"Who Want Smoke?"
] |
69,406,489 |
TimedText:Brandy- I Wanna Be Down.ogg.en.srt
|
1
00:00:03,000 --> 00:00:07,000
I would like to get to know if I could be
2
00:00:07,000 --> 00:00:13,000
The kind of girl that you could be down for
3
00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:18,000
Cause when I look at you I feel something tell me
4
00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:24,000
That you're the kind of guy that I should make a move…
|
[] |
69,406,494 |
Henry Ray
|
Henry Ray is an American former professional basketball player and coach. He played college basketball for the McNeese State Cowboys from 1972 to 1975 and is considered one of the program's best players. He began his basketball career at Peabody High School, an all-black school. Ray was forced to transfer after his sophomore season to Bolton High School when it was racially integrated and new zoning rules were implemented. Ray was selected as the Southland Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year in 1975. Ray was an assistant coach for the Transylvania Pioneers women's basketball team for sixteen seasons.
|
[
"McNeese State Cowboys basketball",
"Alexandria, Louisiana",
"Forward (basketball)",
"basketball",
"college basketball",
"Southland Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year",
"Newspapers.com",
"Peabody Magnet High School",
"Bolton High School (Louisiana)",
"Racial integration",
"Lafayette High School (Kentucky)",
"Bryan Station High School",
"Southland Conference",
"Transylvania University"
] |
69,406,502 |
Draft:Peter Tillou
|
Peter Tillou was an American antiquarian.
|
[] |
69,406,509 |
File:No Longer Home cover.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,527 |
Diversity in swimming
|
The racial composition of swimming and other aquatic sports has long been influenced by the history of segregation and violence at pools as well as the building patterns of public and private pools in America. The exclusion of people of color from public pools during the 20th century not only denied them a space for recreation and exercise but also perpetuated disparities that persist to this day. African Americans, in particular, continue to be underrepresented in swimming and aquatic sports, many facing barriers such as lack of access to swimming lessons, limited exposure to water-based activities, and lingering stereotypes of swimming as a solely "white" sport.
== Transformation of pools ==
=== Pools as bath houses ===
When swimming first became popular in America, pools were segregated by gender and class, not race. At the end of the 19th century and early 20th century, municipal pools were built in the north mainly for poor, urban, working-class Americans and used as bathing sites. Some public pools changed their hours to make it increasingly difficult for working parents to bring their children, including closing on weekends and only having open hours during the day. Other pools opted to entirely drain their pools to avoid integration.
The mid-1900s saw millions of white families leaving their homes to move into newly suburban communities, where they invested in country clubs and private recreational facilities of their own, ultimately withdrawing the taxpayer and monetary power needed to build, expand, develop, and maintain public pools. Budget constraints for public pools have led to complications such as neglect of equipment and decreased staff. This phenomenon occurred throughout the country. Between 1970 and 1980, when Cleveland's white population of the city decreased by 250,000, their recreational budget was cut by over 80%. While the United States has more pools than most other countries, they are highly concentrated among private (and oftentimes inaccessible) spaces.
After the Great Migration, YWCA provided spaces for children of color to learn to swim. Branches of the YWCA open to people of color were often known as Phillis Wheatley branches or simply, colored branches. In the 1930s leaders of the National YWCA, under the leadership of Dorothy Guinn, researched the degree to which Black girls faced discrimination in access to swimming pools in the northern United States. Guinn's 1933 report revealed that local chapters, used a variety of tactics to exclude girls from accessing pools. A 1941 report by the YWCA subsequently found that out of 91 locations, 45 had policies that denied Black girls access to their pools. While exclusion from pools was documented, there is also evidence that some YWCA branches had swim clubs for Black girls. After a successful career as an athlete at Temple University, Inez Patterson began coaching Black girls to swim at the YWCA of Philadelphia and New York City. As of 2023, 96.91% of pools in the United States are private (hotels, schools, or home-owned), showcasing the difficulty of access to these facilities for the general public. Most of these private pools opened between 1950 and 1962, at around the same time as national desegregation. Characterized as a predominantly black community, West Louisville especially suffers from further disparities in swimming ability and water safety. Across the United States, black and brown cities face this same story of disinvestment in public amenities and infrastructural neglect, exacerbating pre-existing disparities.
=== Gender segregation ===
From the 1890s to the 1920s, many pools were gender segregated due to the visual and physical intimacy created by the pool deck atmosphere. Swimming suits for both men and women involved minimal clothing and coverage, thus making the pool deck area visually intimate. In addition, the social and interactive aspects of swimming also made way for more physical contact, both intentional and accidental, between fellow swimmers.
These narratives made it to the legal courts, too; shortly after the decision of Brown v. Board, the NAACP initiated a local trial in Baltimore seeking to desegregate the city's municipal pools. Ultimately, the Baltimore attorney decided that despite the Supreme Court's decision to desegregate public schools, public pools were "too intimate" of a place for integration, specifically alluding to the potential dangers of white women and black men sharing sexualized spaces. Pools physically intimacy, stemming from the sharing of the same water, made way for racist assumptions determining that Black Americans were dirtier and thus had more diseases that white people could contract from swimming together. A key impact of the Great Migration is the development of redlining and race restrictive housing covenants in the north to concentrate Black Americans in specific neighborhoods. Black communities dealt with restrictive housing covenants and higher rent prices which left many Black Americans with minimal options for housing. In the United States, the WPA workers built 805 new swimming pools and 848 wading pools while repairing or improving 339 existing pools. The pools built and improved were described to be "examples of state-of-the-art engineering" with "massive filtration systems, heating units, and even underwater lighting" and also able to adapt to off-season recreation uses like tennis, handball, and volleyball. Although some cities and public pools already had begun the process of desegregation, in 1954, due to the Brown v. Board of Education decision that declared the separate but equal doctrine unconstitutional, segregation in the public sphere became illegal. Thus the division of public pools on the basis of race also became illegal because the designation of public pools based on race was inherently unequal. Later, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 further made the segregation of public facilities illegal by prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race and color.
=== White flight ===
Despite this judicial decision and government legislation, because many pools were unofficially segregated through violence and intimidation by white swimmers, the issue of access for the Black community in many ways persisted. Desegregation often brought intense racial conflict at pools so sometimes Blacks were not admitted on the grounds that their use would cause "disorder" among pool goers. During the mass construction of private pools, the Federal Housing Administration openly discouraged the building of public pools, which were most accessible to Black and lower-class Americans, but encouraged private pools, which were solely available to wealthy whites living in the suburbs. In 1971, the court ruled that the city government could choose to not operate their desegregated facilities if the decision appeared neutral at face value and they are spreading "equal damage" on each person in the area.
=== Paulson Pool (Pittsburg, PA) ===
In July 1935, at the gender-segregated Paulson Pool, nine-year-old Frank Reynolds was punched and kicked in the dressing room by a gang of white kids then later held underwater by the same group. Some intimidated Black swimmers who retreated from the pool were followed and beaten up in a nearby street, while those that stayed faced attacks by whites in the pool. This event became known as the Fairground Park riot: an event of such violence that the city of St. Louis resorted to segregation to maintain the peace.
The NAACP fought the decision to re-segregate the pool and filed a lawsuit that eventually ended segregation at Fairgrounds pool park the very next summer. That summer, the number of swimmers plummeted from 313,000 to 10,000 swimmers and just six years later in 1956 the pool was closed completely. After refusing to leave, the manager called law enforcement and got Dr. King arrested and sent to Saint Augustine Jail, where he famously wrote "Letter from the Saint Augustine Jail", calling for people to continue the fight against racial discrimination at Monson Motor Lodge. This effort also included college students on Spring Break, where they joined forces with local Civil Rights activists to protest the segregation in Monson Motor Lodge.
== Swimming at historically black colleges and universities ==
=== Howard University ===
As far back as the 1920s, African American swim coach Clarence Pendleton made significant efforts to have the Howard University swim team nationally recognized and award the team the ability to compete with other swim teams. By 1933 he was no longer coaching the team but returned to Howard to give a talk about swimming. In the 1950s, while recreational facilities were still segregated in Washington, D.C., Pendleton worked as a superintendent for the "colored" facilities. Despite continued employment in aquatics and recreational jobs, Pendlton Sr. and his wife struggled financially due to segregation. Pendleton Jr., who was also known as Penny, was quoted as saying his father was a strict disciplinarian who highly valued education and frequently told his son, "If you don't think, you stink." In the 1980s, Pendleton's son controversially served as chair of the United States Commission on Civil Rights under President Ronald Reagan.
Howard University is the only HBCU Division 1 team in the United States. As a team that is composed of almost all black swimmers, they are actively fighting the stereotype that black people are less capable swimmers. This assumption along with the fact that minority Americans are twice as likely to drown than white Americans have prompted the Howard team to fight this problem. Occasionally, the team, Sigma Gamma Rho sorority, and Olympians Maritza McClendon and Cullen Jones have worked together to provide free swim clinics to kids in the DC community. She was promised the opportunity to tryout for the team when she enrolled at Howard. While at Howard she competed in numerous swimming events and majored in physical education. As a result of her accomplishments in the pool, Arrington was featured in both Jet and Ebony Magazines. The press coverage highlighting her accomplishments frequently mentioned her gender. For example, the Howard University Hilltop newspaper referred to her in print as a "lady diver."
=== Spelman College ===
In 1961 a swim club for women at Spelman College was established.
== Notable activists ==
Simone Manuel
Brenda Villa
Lia Neal
Ashleigh Johnson
Cullen Jones
Sabir Muhammad
Max Irving
Schuyler Bailar
Inez Patterson
== Media influences ==
TV shows
In May 1969, Fred Rogers or Mr. Rogers, host of the popular children's show Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, aired a scene that was directed at the issue of black and white Americans swimming together. In the scene, Mr.Rogers invites black actor Francois Clemmons, who was recurring character Officer Clemmons on the show, to put his feet in a small pool on a hot summer day. The two men then chat by the pool and at the end of the scene Mr. Rogers shares his towel with Officer Clemmons. When the scene aired in 1969, segregation was unconstitutional in the United States yet Black Americans still were not treated as equal citizens and did not share pools with fellow White Americans.
"The Little Rascals" series character Billie "Buckwheat" Thomas, an African-American young boy, was portrayed to be the only child in the friend group that was unable to swim. While the series did not make any direct links between race and swimming capability, the portrayal of Buckwheat as the only non-swimmer in the friend circle reinforced the stereotype that black people are less proficient in swimming. This portrayal perpetuated the misconception that swimming ability is tied to race, even if it was not explicitly stated within the show. The repeated depiction of Buckwheat's inability to swim in various episodes of "The Little Rascals" series contributed to the normalization of this stereotype in popular culture.
Advertising
Pool advertising, sunblock promotional media, and swimwear commercials often feature predominately white individuals and families, excluding people of color from the imagery associated with aquatics. 20th century advertising hyper-focused on white men and women in their depictions of the idealized 'All-American' pool experience, perpetuating exclusionary standards of leisure.
|
[
"American Beach, Florida",
"St. Louis",
"Spelman College",
"Millersville University of Pennsylvania",
"Monson Motor Lodge",
"Great Depression",
"Sigma Gamma Rho",
"civil rights movement",
"Stereotypes of African Americans",
"Clarence M. Pendleton Jr.",
"YWCA USA",
"Schuyler Bailar",
"Inez Patterson",
"Fairground Park riot",
"Palmer v. Thompson",
"Max Irving",
"germ theory of disease",
"United States Commission on Civil Rights",
"Civil Rights Act of 1964",
"Lyndon B. Johnson",
"Howard University",
"The Little Rascals (film)",
"Paradise Park, Florida",
"Fred Rogers",
"Billie \"Buckwheat\" Thomas",
"Civil Works Administration",
"Ashleigh Johnson",
"NAACP",
"Mister Rogers' Neighborhood",
"Lia Neal",
"Brenda Villa",
"Great Migration (African American)",
"Simone Manuel",
"Sandra Ann Arrington",
"Federal Housing Administration",
"NPR",
"Racial segregation in the United States",
"Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association",
"Jet (magazine)",
"White House",
"Centennial Park Swimming Pool",
"Martin Luther King Jr.",
"Ronald Reagan",
"Cullen Jones",
"François Clemmons",
"Maritza McClendon",
"Franklin D. Roosevelt",
"Butler Beach",
"Historically black colleges and universities",
"Ebony (magazine)",
"Sabir Muhammad",
"Bruce's Beach",
"Brown v. Board of Education",
"Manhattan Beach (Florida)",
"Gender role",
"Dorothy Dandridge",
"Works Progress Administration"
] |
69,406,528 |
George Mackaness
|
George Bellamy Mackaness (20 August 1922 – 4 March 2007) was an Australian professor of microbiology, immunologist, writer and administrator, who researched and described the life history of the macrophage. He showed that by infecting mice with intracellular bacteria, macrophages could be activated to attack other bacteria, triggering further research on "macrophage activation", a term he has come to be associated with.
Mackaness completed his early medical training at Sydney Hospital. After the Second World War he moved to London to study pathology before taking up a graduate post at Howard Florey's Laboratory in Oxford. There he studied the role of monocytes and macrophages in killing Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Simultaneously he worked on anti-tuberculous medicines, including streptomycin and isoniazid, before receiving his DPhil in 1953. Shortly after returning to Australia, Mackeness was appointed acting head of the Department of Experimental Pathology at the John Curtin School of Medical Research (JCSMR), where his observations led him to describe "acquired cellular resistance" and that specifically committed T-cells reacting with antigen, activated the macrophages. He had by this time completed a sabbatical to the Rockefeller Institute, and had written extensively on renin and high blood pressure.
In 1962 he was appointed professor in microbiology at the University of Adelaide. Later, he transferred to the Trudeau Institute in the US before moving to the Squibb Institute for Medical Research, where he played an important part in getting the first ACE inhibitor, captopril, licensed.
==Early life and education==
George Bellamy Mackaness was born on 20 August 1922 in Sydney, Australia, the third child of James Vincent Mackaness, a Sussex Street grocer, and his wife Eleanor Frances Bellamy Mackaness. He used his name in full to distinguish himself from his uncle, George Mackaness, an author and historian. It resulted in an increase in research on "macrophage activation", a term he has become associated with. Discovering antibiotics was his side interest and his work in this field later earned him a fellowship to the Royal Society. At Florey's suggestion, Mackaness simultaneously took to studying anti-tuberculous medicines, including streptomycin and isoniazid. He delayed completing his thesis while working on isoniazid and received his DPhil in 1953. With his colleagues, he confirmed that specifically committed T-lymphocytes reacting with antigen, activated the macrophages.
He became president of the Squibb Institute for Medical Research in New Jersey in 1976. While at Squibb, the FDA had denied a license to the first ACE inhibitor, captopril, due the side effects being too unacceptable, particularly the risk of producing a severe low blood count. Mackaness persuaded the company to reduce the dose by half, resulting in FDA approval and significant profits for the Squibb. His last publication before retirement was a review article on ACE inhibitors.
Following retirement in 1985, he moved to Seabrook Island, South Carolina to be near his son and three granddaughters. He later developed Alzheimer's disease.
==Personal and family==
In 1945, after graduating, Mackaness married Gwynneth Patterson, an army nurse, who he met during the early years of the Second World War, whilst a medical student. They had one son, Miles.
==Awards and honours==
He was awarded the Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize in 1975. In 1976, he was elected fellow of the Royal Society. In 1998 he received the Novartis Prizes for Immunology and he was also elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
==Death==
His death on 4 March 2007 in Charleston, South Carolina, at age 84, was followed a few days later by his wife's. Both had spent a year together at the same extended care facility.
==Selected publications==
(Co-author)
|
[
"streptomycin",
"macrophage",
"Squibb Institute for Medical Research",
"Novartis Prizes for Immunology",
"University of Sydney",
"Howard Florey",
"Trudeau Institute",
"Charleston, South Carolina",
"Henry Harris (scientist)",
"aplastic anaemia",
"University of Adelaide",
"Howard Florey's Laboratory",
"Selman Waksman",
"Seabrook Island, South Carolina",
"Journal of Experimental Medicine",
"Sydney",
"Second World War",
"Alzheimer's disease",
"James Learmonth Gowans",
"antigen",
"Fort Street High School",
"Diploma in Clinical Pathology",
"captopril",
"Oxford University Press",
"Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize",
"Listeria monocytogenes",
"John Curtin School of Medical Research",
"Sydney Hospital",
"pathology",
"cell-mediated immunity",
"Mycobacterium tuberculosis",
"Doctor of Philosophy",
"University of London",
"renin",
"Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery",
"Sir William Dunn School of Pathology",
"Lincoln College, Oxford",
"ACE inhibitor",
"T-cells",
"Royal Society",
"immunology",
"René Dubos",
"microbiology",
"Rockefeller University",
"hypertension",
"tuberculosis",
"monocytes",
"T-lymphocytes",
"tuberculosis management",
"Tuberculosis management",
"Sussex Street, Sydney",
"internal medicine",
"George Mackaness (bibliophile)",
"isoniazid"
] |
69,406,544 |
File:Fireteam 2200 cover.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[
"SimSystems"
] |
69,406,549 |
File:Prime Minister’s Trophy (Bahamas Bowl).png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
69,406,550 |
Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur
|
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Jaisinghpur
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
| other_name =
| nickname =
| settlement_type = Village
| image_skyline =
| image_alt =
| image_caption =
| image_map = Jaisinghpur block map.png
| map_caption = Map showing Jaisinghpur (#190) in Jaisinghpur CD block
| pushpin_map = India Uttar Pradesh
| pushpin_label_position = right
| pushpin_map_alt =
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
| coordinates =
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name =
| subdivision_type1 = State
| subdivision_name1 = Uttar Pradesh
| subdivision_type2 = Division
| subdivision_name2 = Ayodhya
| subdivision_type3 = District
| subdivision_name3 = Sultanpur
| established_title =
| established_date =
| founder =
| named_for =
| government_type =
| governing_body =
| unit_pref = Metric
| area_footnotes = As of 2011, it has a population of 2,211 people, in 353 households. It formed part of the taluqdari estate of the Raja of Hasanpur, serving as a tehsil within the estate. The area of the village was given as 178 acres. The area of the village was given as 183 acres and it had a medical practitioner, maternity and child welfare centre, and post office at that point. The main staple foods were listed as wheat and rice. The area of the village was listed as 72.04 hectares. Members of the 0-6 age group numbered 290, or 18% of the total; this group was 46% male (132) and 54% female (158). Members of scheduled castes numbered 374, or 23% of the village's total population, while no members of scheduled tribes were recorded. The literacy rate of the village was 41.5% (289 men and 259 women, counting only people age 7 and up). 362 people were classified as main workers (359 men and 3 women), while 0 people were classified as marginal workers; the remaining 1,248 residents were non-workers. The breakdown of main workers by employment category was as follows: 139 cultivators (i.e. people who owned or leased their land); 105 agricultural labourers (i.e. people who worked someone else's land in return for payment); 0 workers in livestock, forestry, fishing, hunting, plantations, orchards, etc.; 0 in mining and quarrying; 34 household industry workers; 1 worker employed in other manufacturing, processing, service, and repair roles; 0 construction workers; 21 employed in trade and commerce; 1 employed in transport, storage, and communications; and 61 in other services.
==Villages==
Jaisinghpur CD block has the following 177 villages:
|
[
"Muili",
"acre",
"Sartejpur",
"Bhawanipur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Jvalipur",
"Gangev",
"Lakhanpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Sisouda",
"Visundas Pur",
"Lavdeha",
"Athaisi",
"Moukedih",
"Gopalpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170274)",
"Belhari",
"Chand Pur",
"Siyarabhari",
"Karsa, Sultanpur",
"Holepur",
"Nagaipur",
"Tamoli Pur",
"Chandanpur, Sultanpur",
"Gudbad",
"Ayubpur",
"Bhikhupur",
"Parsoha",
"Alahadadpur",
"Pidhi, Sultanpur",
"Mariharpur",
"Dadawa, Sultanpur",
"scheduled tribes",
"Dostpur",
"Indian Standard Time",
"Sadarpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170189)",
"Goragaon",
"pargana",
"Sadarpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170129)",
"Barua, Sultanpur",
"Kathoutiya",
"Madhvpur Chhitouna",
"Barsoma",
"Chakshura",
"Nevada, Sultanpur",
"List of districts of India",
"Sata, Sultanpur",
"Shobhipur",
"Gopalpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170200)",
"Madhuwan, Sultanpur",
"Kandipur",
"Kataka, Sultanpur",
"Odouli",
"Daulatpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Urdu",
"Devpara Par",
"Domapara",
"Bhairopur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"tat patti",
"Jolimirganj",
"Jagatpur, Sultanpur",
"Biri, Sultanpur",
"thana",
"Khajuri, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Para, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Bahali",
"Mokalpur",
"Surapur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Saraiya, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170153)",
"Uttar Pradesh",
"Chiranedih",
"literacy rate",
"community development block",
"Chorama",
"Udaypur, Sultanpur",
"Ravaniya",
"Sumerpur (Mahamodpur)",
"Rahilpara",
"Khandushpur",
"1951 Census of India",
"Saraiya, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170203)",
"Bansgaon, Sultanpur",
"Saraynaurang",
"India",
"Amdeva",
"Rampur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Mahamudpur Salahpur",
"Bhojapur",
"Vaidpur",
"Bewapar",
"Administrative divisions of India",
"Hasanpur",
"Bharsare",
"Domanpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170181)",
"Khargpur",
"Bhauad Dinpur",
"manufacturing",
"Sevtari",
"Choure",
"Sarayjehali",
"Domanpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur (census code 170146)",
"Numayen",
"Purushottampur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Uapdhyaypur",
"Hansarampur",
"Rajapur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Kilhapur",
"Arjunpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Ayodhya division",
"Pipara, Sultanpur",
"Salarpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Mirpur Saroiya",
"Choubepur",
"1981 Census of India",
"Bhidura",
"Gomva",
"Isahakpur",
"Lathawa",
"Jayainghpur Khurd",
"Bhasupur",
"sugar refining",
"Bagiyagown",
"Tolva, Sultanpur",
"Amliyashikara",
"Kareban",
"Umari, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"hectare",
"Baharpur",
"Konchi, Sultanpur",
"Paigapur",
"Karnaipur",
"Masirpur",
"Mishroli",
"1961 Census of India",
"Mahamudpur Semari",
"Gouhaniyan",
"Rupinpur",
"Pindoran",
"1991 Census of India",
"Ashapur",
"Vinchhekoilaha",
"Kakwadpur",
"Randouli",
"Ramapur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Jasapara",
"Bhanpur, Sultanpur",
"Saidpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"construction worker",
"Hindi language",
"Madai, Sultanpur",
"Vaidaha",
"Postal Index Number",
"Birsinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Baruie",
"Mungar, Sultanpur",
"Surouli",
"Nidura",
"nyaya panchayat",
"Damodarpur",
"Dhanudih",
"Mahmud Purlakhanpur",
"Devariya, Sultanpur",
"Phtahpur",
"Sapahi, Sultanpur",
"Sultanpur district",
"Amiliyavisvi",
"Churavanpur",
"Khatwar",
"Brounsa",
"Hayat Nagar",
"States and territories of India",
"taluqdar",
"Vinwan",
"tehsil",
"Lhouta",
"Padarathpur",
"Isur",
"Basounha",
"Kandhapur",
"Uthaghanpur",
"Ramchandarpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"haat",
"Kalyanpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Sahupara",
"Bevtari",
"Mahadavpur",
"Bhabhot",
"Basakpur",
"Alavalpur",
"Pandeypur",
"Narayanpur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Kolhuamau",
"Denva",
"Ganeshpur Kaithouli",
"Ajijpur",
"Madhopur, Jaisinghpur, Sultanpur",
"Vibharpur",
"Dhandhai",
"Virmalpur",
"Dubepur",
"Sonupara",
"Laxmipatti",
"Fajilpur",
"Khemapur",
"Faijullapur",
"Bhiti",
"Baraunsa",
"Savai",
"Sahadatpur",
"scheduled caste",
"beet sugar",
"Gangoliya, Sultanpur",
"Viraipur"
] |
69,406,552 |
Hamilton (footballer, born 1991)
|
Hamilton Soares de Sá (born 31 May 1991) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker.
==Honours==
===Individual===
Thai League 1 Top Scorer (1): 2021–22
|
[
"association football",
"Thai League 1",
"Nongbua Pitchaya F.C.",
"Port F.C.",
"Manaus Futebol Clube",
"Kazma SC",
"Manaus",
"Forward (association football)",
"forward (association football)",
"2021–22 Thai League 1",
"Princesa do Solimões Esporte Clube"
] |
69,406,553 |
Template:Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Lead Performance
|
[
"Danielle Deadwyler",
"Olivia Colman",
"Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Lead Performance",
"Colman Domingo",
"Lily Gladstone",
"Frankie Faison"
] |
|
69,406,554 |
Paja Francuski
|
Paja Francuski (; 1949–25 March 2023) is a politician in Serbia. He was the mayor of Kikinda from 1996 to 2000, served in the Assembly of Vojvodina from 1997 to 2004, and was a member of the Executive Council of Vojvodina from 2000 to 2004. During his time as an elected official, Francuski was a member of the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina (LSV).
==Early life and private career==
Francuski was born in Kikinda in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Mining and Geology and worked at Naftna Industrija Srbije.
==Politician==
===During the Milošević years (1992–2000)===
Francuski was first elected to the Kikinda municipal assembly in the December 1992 Serbian local elections.
In 1996, the LSV formed an alliance known as the Vojvodina Coalition (KV) with two other regional parties. This coalition won a plurality victory in Kikinda in the 1996 local elections and, in conjunction with the mostly supportive Zajedno (English: Together) coalition, controlled a majority of seats in the assembly. Francuski was re-elected to the assembly and, when it convened, was chosen as its president (i.e., speaker). At the time, this position was equivalent to that of mayor.
Francuski was also elected for Kikinda's second division as a Vojvodina Coalition candidate in the concurrent 1996 Vojvodina provincial election and was sworn in when the assembly convened in early 1997. The election was won by the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), and Francuski served in opposition.
The LSV left the Vojvodina Coalition in 1998. Over the next two years, Francuski emerged as a prominent local opponent of Slobodan Milošević's government. In September 1999, he attended a meeting of the Socialist International's committee on local authorities with another member of the Serbian opposition.
===The fall of Milošević and after (2000–12)===
The LSV joined the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS), a broad and ideologically diverse coalition of parties opposed to Milošević's government, in 2000. The DOS defeated Milošević in the 2000 Yugoslavian general election, an event that prompted wide-scale changes in Serbian politics.
Francuski was re-elected for Kikinda's second division as a DOS candidate in the 2000 provincial election and was also re-elected to the Kikinda municipal assembly in the concurrent 2000 local elections. The DOS won majority victories at both levels of government. When the provincial assembly convened, Francuski was appointed as one of the vice-presidents of Vojvodina's executive council. He served in this capacity until 2002, when he was re-assigned as the provincial secretary for energy and minerals. In the latter role, he took part in discussions about forming a public company for natural gas distribution in the province; in September 2003, he had to announce that this plan was being abandoned, as there were no viable options to provide a stable, safe, and cheap supply to consumers. The following year, he complained that relations between the republican and provincial energy ministries were not satisfactory.
The DOS coalition had dissolved by 2004, and the LSV contested that year's provincial election in its own Together for Vojvodina (ZZV) coalition. Francuski sought re-election in Kikinda's second division and was defeated. He stood down from the executive council shortly after the election.
Francuski briefly returned to political life in 2012 as a member of the Preokret (English: U-Turn) coalition. He sought re-election to the provincial assembly in his old constituency for the 2012 provincial election and was defeated. He also appeared in the third position on the U-Turn list for Kikinda in the 2012 local elections; the list did not cross the electoral threshold to win any mandates.
Francuski died on 25 March 2023 after a short and serious illness.
==Electoral record==
===Provincial (Vojvodina)===
|
[
"Serbian Progressive Party",
"Blagoje Krajinović",
"Dragan Pakaški",
"Serbian Renewal Movement",
"People's Republic of Serbia",
"2000 Vojvodina provincial election",
"Together for Vojvodina (coalition)",
"Nebojša Čović",
"Serbia",
"Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina",
"U-Turn (Serbian coalition)",
"Socialist Party of Serbia",
"2000 Serbian local elections",
"2012 Serbian local elections",
"Serbian Radical Party",
"Strength of Serbia Movement",
"2000 Yugoslavian general election",
"Tomislav Nikolić",
"Branislav Blažić",
"United Regions of Serbia",
"Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia",
"2004 Vojvodina provincial election",
"Savo Dobranić",
"Democratic Party (Serbia)",
"Social Democratic Party of Serbia",
"Democratic Party of Serbia",
"1996 Serbian local elections",
"Democratic Alternative (Serbia)",
"Choice for a Better Life",
"Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians",
"Speaker (politics)",
"Democratic Opposition of Serbia",
"Miloš Šibul",
"Let's Get Serbia Moving",
"1996 Vojvodina provincial election",
"Social Democratic Party (Serbia 2001–2010)",
"G17 Plus",
"University of Belgrade",
"Slavica Tatomir",
"Kikinda",
"Movement of Socialists",
"Party of United Pensioners of Serbia",
"Slobodan Milošević",
"League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina",
"Assembly of Vojvodina",
"Vojvodina Coalition",
"Nenad Čanak",
"December 1992 Serbian local elections",
"Svetislav Vukmirica",
"United Serbia",
"New Serbia (political party)",
"Socialist International",
"2012 Vojvodina provincial election",
"Vojvodina",
"electoral threshold",
"Naftna Industrija Srbije",
"Opposition (politics)"
] |
69,406,562 |
The Homestead, Edgbaston
|
The Homestead, 25 Woodbourne Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham, England is a house built in 1897. It was designed by Charles Bateman, and built by James Smith & Son. The architectural style is Arts and Crafts and the house is a Grade I listed building. The garden wall and gate piers facing Woodbourne Road have a separate Grade I listing. The Homestead remains a private residence.
==History==
Over a period of some three hundred years, the city of Birmingham expanded from a West Midlands town with few natural advantages into England's second city and "one of the greatest manufacturing centres in the world". The later 19th century saw major growth of the city's suburbs, including that of Edgbaston, to the south-west of the city centre. The area largely belonged to the Gough-Calthorpe family which presided over sensitive development aimed at the city's affluent middle and upper classes. The city's architects developed a distinctive regional variant of the Arts and Crafts architectural style, inspired by William Lethaby's The Hurst at Four Oaks, Sutton Coldfield, and culminating in the Bournville model village developed by the Cadbury family of chocolate manufacturers.
Charles Bateman (1863–1947) was firmly in this architectural tradition. Working with his father John Jones Bateman, and over the course of a career spent largely in Birmingham and the Cotswolds, he developed a substantial practice. Bateman undertook considerable work in the industrial and commercial, as well as the domestic, fields. Peter Davey considers his printing works, on Cornwall Street in Birmingham, to be "one of the most daring designs for an industrial building of the period." In 1897, he began the construction of The Homestead. The house remains a private residence.
==Architecture and description==
The Arts and Crafts architectural style in domestic architecture was championed by Edwin Lutyens and popularised by his friend, collaborator and client, Edward Hudson, the owner of Country Life. The style caught hold in the English suburbs; Peter Davey, in his study Arts and Crafts Architecture, notes that "the architecture of Voysey, Baillie Scott, Parker and early Lutyens lives on in endless copies of hips and gables, half-timbering and harling, mullions and leaded bay windows". The Homestead is built to an L-plan and is of two storeys and three bays. The interior remains "virtually as built". Julian Holder notes the "Voysey-like assurance" of Bateman's composition. The house's Historic England listing record calls it "the most innovating of Bateman and Bateman's domestic Arts and Crafts designs".
|
[
"List of house types",
"John Jones Bateman",
"Phaidon Press",
"Hip roof",
"billiard room",
"Richard Barry Parker",
"Harling (wall finish)",
"William Lethaby",
"Timber framing",
"Pevsner Architectural Guides",
"gable",
"suburbs",
"Homily",
"University of Iowa Press",
"Edgbaston",
"Birmingham",
"Historic England",
"inglenook",
"Cotswolds",
"Listed building",
"Baillie Scott",
"Charles Bateman (architect)",
"University of Birmingham",
"Macmillan Publishers",
"Gough-Calthorpe family",
"Welbeck Publishing Group",
"West Midlands (region)",
"mullion",
"Nikolaus Pevsner",
"Arts and Crafts movement",
"model village",
"Country Life (magazine)",
"Bournville",
"C. F. A. Voysey",
"bay window",
"Leadlight",
"Cadbury",
"Yale University Press",
"Edward Hudson (magazine owner)",
"Gatepost",
"Four Oaks, Sutton Coldfield",
"Augustus Gough-Calthorpe, 6th Baron Calthorpe",
"Edwin Lutyens"
] |
69,406,565 |
Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/AndreaGotts/Archive
|
__TOC__
===26 November 2021===
====Suspected sockpuppets====
Tools: Editor interaction utility • Interaction Timeline • User compare report Auto-generated every hour.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Log&page=Draft%3AZhang+Bo+%28CEO%2FChairman+of+China+Hongqiao+Group%29
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:AngelesLlabres&oldid=1050806861
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:AndreaGotts
There are similar edits in Draft:Zhang Bo (CEO/Chairman of China Hongqiao Group), and both use the user page as Draft:Zhang Bo (CEO/Chairman of China Hongqiao Group)'s backup.
They all uploaded photos of Zhang Bo although the behavior was not at en.wikipedia.org but at commons.wikimedia.org. Rastinition (talk) 13:01, 26 November 2021 (UTC)
====Comments by other users====
Accused parties may also comment/discuss in this section below. See Defending yourself against claims.
====Clerk, CheckUser, and/or patrolling admin comments====
-- RoySmith (talk) 18:25, 30 November 2021 (UTC)
----
===18 December 2021===
====Suspected sockpuppets====
( original case name)
Tools: Editor interaction utility • Interaction Timeline • User compare report Auto-generated every hour.
See Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/AndreaGotts/Archive
Only upload pictures related to China Hongqiao Group or edit pages related to China Hongqiao Group. And use the user page as Draft:Zhang Bo (CEO/Chairman of China Hongqiao Group) or Draft:Zhang Bo backup.I found out that he tried to make a backup in es.wikipedia.
They all try to create Draft:Zhang Bo (CEO/Chairman of China Hongqiao Group) or Draft:Zhang Bo.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=AngelesLlabres AngelesLlabres and https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=CianiMarcos CianiMarcos triggered filter description: Promotional text added by user to own user(-talk) page.--Rastinition (talk) 14:08, 18 December 2021 (UTC)
====Comments by other users====
Accused parties may also comment/discuss in this section below. See Defending yourself against claims.
====Clerk, CheckUser, and/or patrolling admin comments====
- I am seeing enough here based on the filter hits, but let's look for sleepers. TheSandDoctor Talk 18:11, 19 December 2021 (UTC)
- Girth Summit (blether) 16:01, 20 December 2021 (UTC)
. I don't see any obvious sleepers. Girth Summit (blether) 16:06, 20 December 2021 (UTC)
Nothing left to do that I can see, closing. -- RoySmith (talk) 18:47, 20 December 2021 (UTC)
----
===09 January 2022===
====Suspected sockpuppets====
Tools: Editor interaction utility • Interaction Timeline • User compare report Auto-generated every hour.
Account naming rules contain Andrea string.See Wikipedia:Sockpuppet_investigations/AndreaGotts/Archive#26_November_2021
Interested in Draft: Zhang Bo, Zhang Bo's family or company in the early days of account creation.
According to Daft: Zhang Bo's editing history, the editing record of the person who uploaded the picture, and the use record of the picture, there is a high possibility that these accounts are writers hired by the same person or company.But considering the account naming rules, it is also possible that these accounts are the same person, not the writer. Rastinition (talk) 14:37, 9 January 2022 (UTC)
PS:Anyway, that draft is better than yesterday.I don't know if it's my misunderstanding, the sock puppet investigation made him try to avoid the investigation, and the behavior of avoiding the investigation made the draft greatly improved.--Rastinition (talk) 15:12, 9 January 2022 (UTC)
====Comments by other users====
Accused parties may also comment/discuss in this section below. See Defending yourself against claims.
====Clerk, CheckUser, and/or patrolling admin comments====
- worth a check TheSandDoctor Talk 18:22, 9 January 2022 (UTC)
... ~Oshwah~(talk) (contribs) 19:25, 9 January 2022 (UTC)
Checkuser evidence:
is to , , , and others.
Also found , but is - no technical data is available.
Unless has adopted a different M.O., this user is going through IP addresses that geolocate over many different countries and providers (most likely VPN or proxy use). The other accounts listed (which I are socks of one another) all go through (relatively) close, if not the same ranges, all of which geolocate to the same area. Taking into account the technical evidence that I have, I'm forced to go with "inconclusive" here... Sorry...
Behavioral evidence:
This is where things get a bit interesting. Looking through the contributions, logs, and deleted contributions for each account listed above, it's obvious that there's a mutual interest with the subject Zhang Bo. Each and every account (after a various amount of edits elsewhere) have gravitated (in one manner or another) toward making edits that involve this person. As of the time of this writing, these accounts have collectively created:
Draft:Zhang Bo
User:AndreaGotts (the revision is hidden per RD1, but it's pretty much like the others)
Draft:Zhang Bo (executive)
Draft:Zhang Bo (businessman)
Draft:Zhang Bo (CEO/Chairman of China Hongqiao Group)
The similarities are subtle, but one that I found that really made this case a "very likely find" is this revision by (sorry, it's rev-del'd, but trust me - it's there!), and this edit by . Both pages have similar content structure and word use, however both of these users either add or change the content to refer to the subject as Mr. Zhang Bo in the opening sentence of the lead paragraph. Because all of these accounts have gravitated toward editing the same article subject, and with the similarities that I found between and the other accounts, I believe that a reasonable amount of behavioral evidence exists to block the user as a sock puppet of . Therefore, I am blocking this account and tagging them as a "proven sock". This SPI can be closed. ~Oshwah~(talk) (contribs) 21:56, 9 January 2022 (UTC)
----
|
[
"China Hongqiao Group",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=CianiMarcos CianiMarcos",
"WP:REVDEL",
"WP:RD1",
"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&wpSearchUser=AngelesLlabres AngelesLlabres"
] |
69,406,566 |
Template:Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Supporting Performance
|
[
"Troy Kotsur",
"Clarence Maclin",
"Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Supporting Performance",
"Ke Huy Quan",
"Charles Melton"
] |
|
69,406,569 |
Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P. v. Penguin Books USA, Inc.
|
Dr. Seuss Enters., L.P. v. Penguin Books USA, Inc. 109 F.3d 1394 (9th Cir. 1997) was a copyright lawsuit where the court determined if a copy of an original work's artistic style, plot, themes, and certain key character elements qualified as fair use. Penguin Books published a book titled The Cat NOT in the Hat! A Parody by Dr. Juice that use the artistic style, themes and characteristics of Dr. Seuss books to tell the story of the O. J. Simpson murder case. Dr. Seuss Enterprises accused the publisher of copyright and trademark infringement.
==Background==
Dr. Seuss Enterprises owns the trademarks and copyrights author Dr. Seuss' publications. Dr. Seuss authored and published 47 books that are widely distributed and contains characteristics such as simple rhyming and repetitive language, with characters that are recognizable to children. This includes the book The Cat in the Hat, first published in 1957 with the main character being "the Cat" who wears a red and white striped stovepipe hat, which Seuss owns the trademark to. Dr. Seuss also owns copyright registrations for several books containing the Cat.
Alan Katz and Chris Wrinn wrote and illustrated The Cat NOT in the Hat! A Parody by Dr. Juice satirizing the O. J. Simpson murder case in the style of Dr. Seuss' publications. Penguin Books USA, Inc. and Dove Audio, Inc., publishers of the work, were not licensed or authorized to use the work from Dr. Seuss and did not request permission. Dr. Seuss Enterprises filed a complaint for copyright and trademark infringement, an application for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction, after seeing advertising promoting the satirical work.
In the complaint Seuss alleged that Katz and Wrinn misappropriated substantial protected elements of its copyrighted works and violations of the Copyright Code, 17 U.S.C. §§ 501-02; the Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 1995, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(1); the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a); and the California Unfair Competition Statute, § 17200 et seq. and § 14330. The district court denied the temporary restraining order and set the preliminary injunction for trial. Seuss incorporated infringement claims for publications Horton Hatches the Egg and One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish in the request for injunctive relief, which was granted on March 21, 1996.
Penguin and Dove printed 12,000 books of the satirical work at the cost of $35,500, which the court refrained from being distributed. Penguin and Dove filed a motion for reconsideration, which cause the court to modify the order but failed to dissolve the preliminary injunction. The court found that defendants took substantial protected expression from The Cat in the Hat but not from Horton or One Fish Two Fish, a strong likelihood on success on the parody as fair use issue, serious questions for litigation and a balance of hardships favoring Seuss on the trademark violations, a strong likelihood that a copyright claim raising a presumption of irreparable harm, and a low success on the federal dilution claim.
Penguin and Dove appealed the district court's decision of a preliminary injunction prohibiting the distribution of The Cat NOT in the Hat! A Parody by Dr. Juice.
==Opinion of the Court==
Judge Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain wrote the majority opinion where the court affirmed the preliminary injunction against Penguin Books.
For proving a case of copyright infringement Seuss proved that he held a valid copyright to The Cat in the Hat by owning copyright registration certificates and demonstrated substantial similarity in a two-part test where a subjective and objective analysis of expression was performed. The court determined that substantial similarity exists where the Cat was a central character to Seuss’ work, Alan Katz admitting that the illustrations were inspired by the cat, and Penguin appropriated the Cat's image, copying the hat and using the image 13 times.
The court addressed Penguin's fair use defense under parody by analyzing the four factor test in 17 U.S.C. § 107 and concluded that the District Court's ruling against fair use was not erroneous. For the first factor analyzing the purpose and commercial use of the work, the court determined it to be against fair use based on the commercial use of the work and that the work merely mimics the characteristic style of Dr. Seuss, it does not hold the style up to ridicule and there was no effort to create transformative work. For the second factor analyzing the nature of the work, the court determined it to be against fair use due to the use of the Cat, the central character in Seuss’ work. For the third factor looking at the amount and substantiality of the portion of the work used, the court determined, the court sided with the district court decision against fair use, because Penguin appropriated the cat's character a central character in Seuss’ work. For the fourth factor analyzing the effect on the commercial market, the court ruled against fair use concluding that Penguin's work can be considered market substitution and citing Penguin's failure of bringing forth relevant markets.
For the trademark infringement, the court examined the likelihood of confusion in the market place and sided with the district court, based on proximity and similarities between infringement items such as the Cat's hat, the narrator name, the title.
|
[
"Lanham Act",
"Thomas G. Nelson",
"copyright",
"United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit",
"O. J. Simpson murder case",
"One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish",
"F.3d",
"Michael Daly Hawkins",
"Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain",
"Dr. Seuss Enterprises",
"Title 17 of the United States Code",
"Horton Hatches the Egg",
"temporary restraining order",
"trademark infringement",
"The Cat in the Hat",
"copyright infringement",
"Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 1995",
"fair use",
"Dr. Seuss",
"Penguin Books"
] |
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