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Tip on a Dead Jockey and Other Stories | 75,673,427 | Theme | [T]he expatriate stories work from a different kind of moral basis; they are very much in the tradition of Henry James in their depiction of innocent Americans bringing harm to themselves or others in sophisticated Europe. |
Kurilsky (disambiguation) | 75,673,443 | Kurilsky may refer to: |
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Super King Markets | 75,673,466 | Super King Markets is an American supermarket chain located in the Greater Los Angeles region. As of 2016, Super King Markets gained more than 1,600 team members and as of 2020, have 8 locations in total. Super King Markets is headquartered in Los Angeles, California. |
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Super King Markets | 75,673,466 | History | Super King Markets, which at the time was called Anaheim King Market, was founded in 1993 by the Fermanian family in Anaheim, California. In 2009, Super King Markets was selected for having the "Best Ethnic Deli Counter" by LA Weekly. In February of 2016, Super King Markets won the Unified Grocers' Ben Schwartz Retail Grocery Visionary Award. In 2019, Super King Markets had around 200,000 customers per week. |
Super King Markets | 75,673,466 | Locations | Super King Markets has supermarkets at the following locations: |
Sensazione ultra (Ghali album) | 75,673,505 | Sensazione ultra is the third studio album by Italian rapper Ghali, released on 20 May 2022 by Sto Records, Warner Music and Atlantic Records. |
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Sensazione ultra (Ghali album) | 75,673,505 | The album peaked at number 2 of the Italian single chart and was certified gold. |
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Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | The Marquis de Riestra street is a central street in the Spanish city of Pontevedra, in the first expansion zone of the city in the 19th century, running longitudinally parallel to the Palm Trees Park on its eastern side. It is one of the main streets in Pontevedra city centre. |
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Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Origine of the name | Since 1950, the street has been dedicated to José Riestra López, the first Marquis of Riestra (1853-1923), a great benefactor of Pontevedra. Among other initiatives, he was responsible for bringing electricity to the city in 1888 and the tramway in 1889, as well as various factories and businesses (the first electricity factories in Galicia in 1888 in Verdura square and the first ceramics factory in 1895 in La Barca, as well as the Riestra Bank), improving the city's streets and supporting the construction of institutional buildings. He devoted part of his capital to the city and also donated his manor house and estate at A Caeira for conversion into a large hospital for soldiers repatriated from Cuba and the Philippines following the Spanish-American War. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | In 1853, what is now Marquis de Riestra Street was a road that led from the old St Dominic's Gate of the Pontevedra walls in the España Square to the Saint Joseph's field in what is now the Saint Joseph's Square. From this date onwards, with the first expansion of the city, this road was progressively urbanised, until it was finally consolidated as a street around 1880, forming part of the first expansion of the city outside the old fortified area. Pontevedra City Council put up for sale the line of plots of land opposite Riestra Street that came from the Dominican estate, which had been acquired by auction. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | On 21 December 1880, the Pontevedra City Council decided to name the street that runs from the Alameda Gardens to the end of the old Fairground after the liberal politician Francisco Antonio Riestra Vallaure (father of the Marquis), who died in Madrid, for his enterprising spirit and for having carried out most of the city's initial expansion work from 1860 onwards. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | In these new areas of Pontevedra's first expansion, buildings were erected which, through their form and function, reinforced the bourgeois restoration project, representing the new Pontevedra. In 1896, the publisher, journalist and politician Andrés Landín Varela built a building at number 7, on the ground floor of which he set up a printing works and bookshop, as well as his home on the first floor. In 1905, Manuel Martínez Bautista, a Cuban indiano, completed work on the Villa Pilar mansion on the left-hand side of the street (with a rear façade overlooking the Palm Trees Park). |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | In 1927, the demolition of the premises of a garage on the right-hand side of the street was imposed to allow the new General Gutiérrez Mellado Street, which led to Riestra Street from Michelena Street, to be fully opened up. The last houses blocking the opening of the new street had already been expropriated and demolished in May 1927, although the garage premises on Riestra street were not demolished until 1930. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | In 1950, the street was renamed Marquis of Riestra, a title granted by King Alfonso XIII to José Riestra López on 4 February 1893 by royal decree. The Riestra passageway from Michelena street was named Marquise street, in reference to the wife of the Marquis of Riestra, María Calderón Ozores, daughter of the Count of San Juan. In 1965, the Vázquez Lescaille galleries were opened, from General Gutiérrez Mellado Street to Marquis of Riestra Street. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | History | In 2006, the first section of the street, from the España Square to General Gutiérrez Mellado Street, was renovated and made pedestrian-friendly. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Description | Marquis de Riestra is a 260-metre-long street located in the city's first urban expansion zone, which follows a north-south-east axis and is divided into two sections: a paved pedestrian section from España Square to General Gutiérrez Mellado Street and another section facing south-east from Gutiérrez Mellado Street to Saint Joseph Square, which has two pavements and a central lane for traffic. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Description | It is an essentially flat street, with an average width of 11 metres. The pedestrianised Marquise Street, Gutiérrez Mellado Street on the right-hand side and the small streets of Fray Tomás de Sarria and Enrique Labarta on either side of the garden of the Villa Pilar mansion converge here from north to south.. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Description | This is a very commercial and service-oriented street, with numerous shops, cafés and bank branches. At the beginning, at the junction with Gran Vía de Montero Ríos, is the apse of the Gothic ruins of the former convent and church of Saint Dominic, next to a stone calvary that stood in the forecourt of the former medieval church of Saint Bartholomew before it was demolished.. In the middle of the street is Villa Pilar, an eclectic mansion built in 1905. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Outstanding buildings | At the beginning of Marquis de Riestra Street, the ruins of the Saint Dominic Convent are the remains of a 14th-century Gothic convent and church. Today, along with five other buildings, they form the Provincial Museum of Pontevedra and were declared a Site of Cultural Interest in 1895. Only the apse remains, with five apsidal chapels corresponding to the transverse arm of the transept, which are the purest example of Gothic architecture in Galicia. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Outstanding buildings | At number 11, the Villa Pilar mansion is located. Construction began in 1899 and was completed in 1905. The building is in the eclectic, Art Nouveau style, with three storeys and a single body. It has a semi-basement, three floors and an attic. Its architectural features include continuous bossages and English-style balustrades on all the concrete balconies, a highly innovative feature for the time. The building blends harmoniously into its surroundings, as it is surrounded by a small private garden with palm trees, enclosed by a wrought iron gate. Access to the interior of the building is via Carrara marble staircases on the first floor and wooden staircases on the subsequent floors. The layout of the various floors reflects the lifestyle of the late 19th-century bourgeoisie. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Outstanding buildings | The row of stone houses between the ruins of the Saint Dominic convent and the Villa Pilar mansion, between numbers 13 and 21, are typical of the first expansion of Pontevedra in the 19th century, like those on Oliva Street. They have a ground floor and two upper floors, with balconies on the first floor and galleries on the second, or with balconies on both floors. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Outstanding buildings | At number 3 of Marquis de Riestra Street, on the corner of Pastor Díaz Street and with the main entrance at number 7 of Arquitecto de la Sota Street, stands a 7-storey rationalist residential building designed by architect Alejandro de la Sota in 1970, which is unique in Galicia.. The brownish concrete building incorporates galleries on its façades, has an entrance reduced to its essential lines and has attic space surrounded by a garden. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | Outstanding buildings | At number 30 of the Oliva street, on the corner of the Marquis de Riestra street, stands a 1930 rationalist building designed by the architect Emilio Salgado Urtiaga. |
Calle Marqués de Riestra | 75,673,530 | See also | Catégorie:Catégorie Commons avec lien local identique sur Wikidata |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Raymond George Young (14 March 1934 – 27 December 2022) was an English professional footballer who played as centre-half, most notably for his hometown club Derby County. |
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Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | Young started his career as junior playing for the England schoolboys football team, before joining Derby County's youth setup in 1949. Derby had high hopes for the player and he was seen a possible successor to Leon Leuty. Young played in the Derby's Colts team and signed professional terms with the club in March 1951. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | After progressing into the reserve team, he had to wait several years to make his senior debut, which happened following the arrival of manager Tim Ward, who replaced Harry Storer. Young's style of play better suited Ward's tactics, who promoted him as a first team regular. His senior debut came in a Second Division match against Doncaster Rovers on 16 April 1954, a game which Derby won 3–1. After his first few senior games, Mark Eaton, writing for the Evening Telegraph, praised Young as being a "bright spot" within the central defence position, remarking that he believed Young's performances suggested that he could become a "stylish and dominating centre-half". Young was initially a part-time player for Derby, as he was also in the army, stationed at Aldershot Garrison. His national service call-up had been deferred by two years. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | Derby hierarchy expected Young to hold down a regular slot in the team at centre-half, however for the majority of his career he struggle to do so and it was towards the end of his career where this occurred. His main weakness were lack of pace and being prone to errors by sometimes playing too causally. He fell behind the more physical players of Martin McDonnell and Les Moore, who were ahead in the pecking order. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | Young won the Third Division North in 1956–57 and left the club in September 1966, after losing his place to Bobby Saxton. He made a total of 268 starts and 1 substitute appearance for the club, scoring 5 goals. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | Young joined Heanor Town in September 1966 on a free transfer, after turning down an opportunity to join Hartlepool United, as well as several offers from other clubs. Young had been hopeful of remaining a league football player, and had an assurance from Heanor Town that they would not block any potential transfers to a league club if the opportunity arose. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Career | He ended his football career at Burton Albion, joining them in May 1967. Albion had tried to sign him midway through the previous season, however his former club Heanor Town set a release price of £1,000. Albion released Young at the end of the season. He played for the first team, though lost his place towards the end of the season. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Personal life | Outside of football, Young was a keen golfer, as well as playing cricket and badminton. In 1960, he was selected by Cheadle Hulme cricket club to play for them professionally for that season. He also completed an apprenticeship in plumbing. He had two children with wife Jean, a boy and a girl. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Death | Young died on 27 December 2022 aged 88, at Derby's Florence Nightingale Community Hospital. His funeral was held in Derby on 30 January 2023. |
Ray Young (footballer) | 75,673,535 | Honours | Derby County |
Matthew Martin (organist) | 75,673,565 | Matthew Martin (born 1976) is a choral conductor and organist. In April 2020, he became Precentor and Director of College Music at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge From 2015-2020, he was Director of Music at Keble College, Oxford. |
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Matthew Martin (organist) | 75,673,565 | In 2022, he was commissioned by the Choir of King's College, Cambridge to write a new Christmas carol for their annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols; the carol, “Angelus ad virginem”, was based on a medieval Latin text. In 2023, the choir performed his composition of new music for the familiar carol “Adam lay ybounden”. |
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Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Kudnu is an extinct genus of neodiapsid reptile from the Early Triassic Arcadia Formation of Australia. The type species is K. mackinlayi. |
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Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Discovery and naming | The holotype is QM F9181, an anterior section of a cranium with articulated dentary rami, and it was discovered in the Crater, southwest of Rolleston, Queensland. The referred skull QM F9182 is also known. Kudnu mackinlayi was named and described by Alan Bartholomai in 1979. |
Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Classification | Kudnu was initially classified within Paliguanidae by Bartholomai (1979). Benton (1985) classified Kudnu within Lepidosauromorpha, while Evans (2003) classified Kudnu within Prolacertiformes, and Evans & Jones (2010) later assigned Kudnu to the Procolophonidae. More recent authors, such as Poropat et al. (2023), consider Kudnu to be a basal member of the Neodiapsida. |
Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Paleoecology | The world Kudnu inhabited was still recovering from the recent Permian–Triassic extinction event, and as a result global biodiversity had remained low throughout much of the Early Triassic. The world at this time was generally a hot and arid Environment, reaching a temperature of 50 °C or even 60 °C at times. |
Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Paleoecology | Currently a high diversity of fauna has so far been recorded from the Arcadia Formation that lived alongside Kudnu. This includes a high diversity of amphibians including 14 genera, the archosauriform Kalisuchus rewanensis, the archosauromorph Kadimakara australiensis, the procolophonid Eomurruna yurrgensis as well as an indeterminate Dicynodont. |
Kudnu | 75,673,572 | Paleoecology | There is also evidence of a diversity of indermitae ichnotaxa based on coprolites. |
Camp Castle (Cyprus) | 75,673,574 | Camp Castle is a naval base of the German Navy (Now under the auspices of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon) located within the Port of Limassol in Cyprus. |
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Camp Castle (Cyprus) | 75,673,574 | History | The base began operations in 2006 and primarily serves the German Navy and its efforts in the UNIFIL operation in Lebanon after an agreement was made between with the Republic of Cyprus although other nations part of the same operation have docked their ships on base too. |
Camp Castle (Cyprus) | 75,673,574 | History | Since 2020, the base has increased in significance and has been made a UN base due to the aftermath of the 2020 Beirut explosion and the inability to use it as a result. |
Camp Castle (Cyprus) | 75,673,574 | History | In October 2022, the Defense Commissioner of the Bundestag visited the base. |
Aeroflot Flight 8556 | 75,673,580 | Aeroflot Flight 8556 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Sukhumi to Leningrad. It crashed 13 meters short of the runway on approach killing 13 passengers. |
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Aeroflot Flight 8556 | 75,673,580 | Accident | At 12:45 Moscow time the aircraft began its descent from 10,100 metres (33,100 ft). During the descent the weather deteriorated and heavy rain and a cumulonimbus cloud were present, which was not transmitted to the crew. At 13:05 the plane was at around 200 metres (660 ft) when the descent rate was increased to 7.5 m/s and the aircraft slipped below the glideslope. At this time the controllers were replaced in a violation of procedure. The crew noticed they were below the glideslope so they increased engine-power and initiated a climb. The approach continued however and the rate of descent again reached 7 m/s. At an altitude of 20 metres (66 ft) the crew realized the danger and tried to stop the descent, but the aircraft struck the ground 13 meters short of the runway. The landing gear collapsed and the fuselage broke into three pieces. |
Aeroflot Flight 8556 | 75,673,580 | Causes | The approach was destabilized due to a number of factors. The actions of the crew were inconsistent and uncoordinated. There was no assistance from the approach controller in the final stages of the flight. The accident could have been avoided had the pilots initiated a go-around once they realized the approach was unstable. |
Aeroflot Flight 8556 | 75,673,580 | See also | Aeroflot accidents and incidents in the 1990s |
Aeroflot Flight 8556 | 75,673,580 | See also | List of accidents and incidents involving the Tupolev Tu-154 |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | "The Girls in Their Summer Dresses” is a work of short fiction by Irwin Shaw, originally published in The New Yorker in 1939 and first collected in Sailor off the Bremen and Other Stories (1939) by Random House. |
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The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | The story is widely recognized as one of Shaw’s finest short stories. |
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The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Plot | The story is presented from a third-person omniscient point-of-view, and set in New York City on a sunny day in autumn. Michael and Francis, a young, affluent married couple, take a Sunday morning stroll along Fifth Avenue. The wife wishes to forego an invitation to a private party which promises to be fueled by alcoholic beverages; she prefers to spent the day with her husband. She suggests they attend a baseball game, have dinner at Cavanagh’s afterwards and catch a French film in the evening. |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Plot | The husband is distracted by the many pretty women promenading along Washington Square, and his wife notices his roving eye: she gently chastnes him, and he protests his innocence. Francis interprets Michael’s habitual girl-watching as a potential precursor to infidelity. Michael demures, and assures her he has not cheated on her during their five years of marriage. Francis in turn informs him that she has never desired another man since their second date. |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Plot | The couple stop in a bistro and order drinks. A protracted debate ensues. Michael explains his penchant for watching women as a healthy avocation. Francis begins to weep, and begs him not to discuss the merits of other womens’ attractiveness. They order more drinks, and decide that they will after all accept the invitation to the party. Michael admires her physique as she walks to away to make the phone call. |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Background | In an interview with Paris Review, Shaw recalled that he wrote both “The Girls in Their Summer Dresses” and “The Sailor off the Bremen” in a single week in 1938, when he was 25-years-old. |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Critical appraisal | Literary critic James R. Giles reports that a number of Shaw’s stories “rank with the most distinguished American short fiction, including The Girls in Their Summer Dresses.” |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Critical appraisal | Biographer Michael Shnayerson identifies the story as one that “made him famous.” |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Critical appraisal | Critic Luther Ray Abel in National Review observes that the story “captures [the] fraught dynamic between the sexes well. The tale is dry, painfully cogent, and brief...” |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Critical appraisal | New York Times critic Herbert Mitgang wrote: |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Critical appraisal | Stylistically, Mr. Shaw's short stories were noted for their directness of language, the quick strokes with which he established his different characters, and a strong sense of plotting…He was critically acclaimed for such early short stories as The Girls in Their Summer Dresses. |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Theme | Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren locate the theme in “a serious idea—the failure of love through the failure to recognize the beloved as a person, but as more than a convenience.” |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Theme | Critic James R. Giles considers the dialogue key to understanding these two self-involved urbanites: |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Theme | {{blockquote | What one senses most strongly about Michael and Francis’s quarrel is that it is a ritual. Having no real communication, they fall into the quarrel as a way of talk. This impression is conveyed through the fact that neither really listens to the other; it is almost as if speaking often-rehearsed lines in a play.” |
The Girls in Their Summer Dresses | 75,673,628 | Theme | Biographer Michael Shnayerson observes the pathos of the couple’s relationship in that “these skirmishes are all the they have between them.” The dialogue itself exposes the “emotional shallowness” of of the marriage. |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Tape is a 2020 American thriller drama film written and directed by Deborah Kampmeier and starring Isabelle Fuhrman, Tarek Bishara and Annarosa Mudd. |
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Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Production | In March 2018, it was announced that Fuhrman was cast as the lead in the film. |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Release | The film was given a virtual theatrical release on March 26, 2020 and debuted via streaming on Amazon Prime on April 10, 2020. |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Reception | The film has a 63% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews. Matt Fagerholm of RogerEbert.com awarded the film three and a half stars. Joe Friar of The Victoria Advocate awarded the film three stars. Alex Saveliev of Film Threat rated the film a 3 out of 10. Kate Erbland of IndieWire graded the film a C. |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Reception | Owen Gleiberman of Variety gave the film a positive review and wrote, "Yet even as the film feels up-to-the-minute, it’s been made with a certain threadbare, streets-of-New-York punk feminist mythologizing that may remind you, at times, of the films of Beth B." |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Reception | Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter also gave the film a positive review and wrote, "A hard-hitting psychological drama about an actress who surreptitiously monitors her former assailant and his current prospective victim, Tape benefits from its well-executed thriller mechanics and terrific performances by its three leads." |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Reception | Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times gave the film a negative review and wrote, "Tape, in short, is a terrible movie about appalling behavior." |
Tape (2020 film) | 75,673,635 | Reception | Kimber Meyers of the Los Angeles Times also gave the film a negative review and wrote, "But while Tape is admirable in its aims to frankly explore what happens behind closed doors, it’s less laudable in its execution." |
Sandy Irani | 75,673,645 | Sandy Irani is an American computed scientist. She is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. |
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Sandy Irani | 75,673,645 | Career | She graduated from University of California, Berkeley . She was a postdoctoral Fellow at University of California, San Diego. |
Sandy Irani | 75,673,645 | Career | She is a professor at University of California, Irvine. She is Associate Director, of the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | The 2024 Day 1 (marketed as Raw: Day 1) is the upcoming second Day 1 professional wrestling event produced by WWE, and the first to air as a television special. It will be held primarily for wrestlers from the promotion's Raw brand division. The event will take place on New Year's Day on January 1, 2024, at the Pechanga Arena in San Diego, California, and will air as a special episode of Monday Night Raw on the USA Network, kicking off WWE's week-long programming of New Year's-themed shows called New Year's Knockout Week. Day 1 was previously held as a pay-per-view (PPV) and livestreaming event on January 1, 2022; an event was planned for 2023 but was canceled. |
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WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | On January 1, 2022, the American professional wrestling promotion WWE held a New Year's Day pay-per-view and livestreaming event titled Day 1. A second event was planned for January 1, 2023, but was canceled due to a scheduling conflict with streaming partner Peacock. During the December 11, 2023, episode of Monday Night Raw, it was announced that the Day 1 name had been revived for a special episode of Raw, airing on January 1, 2024, on the USA Network. The television special will broadcast live from the Pechanga Arena in San Diego, California. The show will kick off WWE's week-long programming of New Year's-themed shows called New Year's Knockout Week. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | The event will include four matches that resulted from scripted storylines. Results are predetermined by WWE's writers on the Raw brand, while storylines are produced on WWE's weekly television show, Monday Night Raw. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | At Crown Jewel on November 4, 2023, Seth "Freakin" Rollins defeated Drew McIntyre to retain the World Heavyweight Championship. On the following episode of Raw, McIntyre shook hands with Rollins and stated he would earn a future rematch. On the December 11 episode, Raw General Manager Adam Pearce announced that Rollins would face the now villainous McIntyre in a rematch at Day 1. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | On the December 4, 2023, episode of Raw, Ivy Nile promised to neutralize Women's World Champion Rhea Ripley if she tried to interfere on behalf of her Judgment Day stablemates, Undisputed WWE Tag Team Champions Finn Bálor and Damian Priest against Nile's Diamond Mine stablemates, The Creed Brothers (Brutus Creed and Julius Creed) in their title match. The following week, after Ripley defeated Maxxine Dupri in a non-title match, Ripley and Nile stared each other down. Ripley then vowed to make an example out of Nile, agreeing to put the Women's World Championship on the line agaisnt Nile at Day 1, which was later made official. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | On the November 27, 2023, episode of Raw, Becky Lynch stated she had a couple of fights on the horizon. The following week, Nia Jax asked if one of the fights included her, to which Lynch confirmed, referencing when Jax legitimately broke Lynch's nose in 2018. Over the next two weeks, Lynch appeared ready to face Jax, but Jax stated she would fight Lynch on her own terms, ultimately agreeing to face Lynch at Day 1. |
WWE RawDay 1 (2024) | 75,673,650 | Production | On the December 18, 2023, episode of Raw, the team of Natalya and Tegan Nox and the team of Shayna Baszler and Zoey Stark agreed to a match to determine the number one contenders for the WWE Women's Tag Team Championship, which was scheduled for Day 1. |
Cara Italia | 75,673,654 | "Cara Italia" is a song by Italian rapper Ghali. Produced by Charlie Charles, it was released on 26 January 2018 and later included in the 2020 re-issue of the debut studio album Album. |
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Cara Italia | 75,673,654 | The song peaked at number 1 of the Italian singles' chart and was certified triple platinum. |
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Cara Italia | 75,673,654 | Music video | The music video for "Cara Italia", directed by Iacopo Carapelli, was released on 27 January 2018 via Ghali's YouTube channel. |
Zeina Karam | 75,673,684 | Zeina Karam is a Lebanese journalist with Associated Press (AP). Since 2022 she has been AP's deputy news director for Europe. |
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Zeina Karam | 75,673,684 | Life | Karam gained a degree in political science and public administration from the American University of Beirut. She started covering the Middle East for AP in 1996. In 2011 she was one of the first foreign reporters to enter Syria as the Arab Spring erupted. |
Zeina Karam | 75,673,684 | Life | In 2014 she became AP Beirut bureau chief, overseeing text coverage of Lebanon and Syria. In 2016 she became news director for Lebanon, Syria and Iraq. |
Zeina Karam | 75,673,684 | Life | Karam was a contributor to the 2019 anthology Our Women on the Ground: Essays by Arab Women Reporting from the Middle East. Her contribution, reflecting on the experiences of those who saw Syria descend into civil war, asked the question "Did we do them all justice in our reporting?". |
2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina | 75,673,708 | The 2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina will be the fifth edition of the current Supercopa de España Femenina, an annual women's football competition for clubs in the Spanish football league system that were successful in its major competitions in the preceding season. |
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2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina | 75,673,708 | Barcelona are the defending champions after they defeated Real Sociedad in the previous edition, to win the competition for a record third time. The competition will be held at the Estadio Municipal de Butarque in Leganés |
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2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina | 75,673,708 | Draw | The draw for the competition was held on 29 December 2023. |
2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina | 75,673,708 | Qualification | The competition will feature both finalists of the 2022–23 Copa de la Reina, as well as the next two highest-ranked clubs at the 2022–23 Liga F that had not already qualified through the cup final. |
2023–24 Supercopa de España Femenina | 75,673,708 | Qualification | The following four teams qualified for the tournament. |
Poltavska | 75,673,713 | Poltavska (Ukrainian: Полтавська) may refer to: |
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2024 Bristol City Council election | 75,673,719 | The 2024 Bristol City Council election is scheduled to be held on Thursday 2 May 2024, alongside the other local elections in the United Kingdom, which are being held on the same day. It will elect all 70 councillors to the Bristol City Council for a four-year term. |
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2024 Bristol City Council election | 75,673,719 | Background | At the previous election, which was held in 2021, Labour lost 13 seats, meaning that the council fell under no overall control. |
Dicheniotes enzoria | 75,673,752 | Dicheniotes enzoria is a species of tephritid or fruit flies (Tephritidae); it was previously placed in the genus Pediapelta. |
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