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Katherine Sproehnle | 75,676,367 | Career | Sproehnle was a reporter for the Chicago Tribune after college. She worked with Edward Bernays in publicity, and at a bookstore owned by Fanny Butcher. After she moved to New York City, she was an occasional guest at the Algonquin Round Table gatherings. |
Katherine Sproehnle | 75,676,367 | Career | Sproehnle regularly contributed fiction, reviews, and humorous commentary to The New Yorker, from the 1920s into the 1940s, She co-wrote some pieces with Jane Grant, James Thurber, and Robert M. Coates. In the 1940s she was the theatre critic for Mademoiselle magazine. She also wrote for Vogue, Woman's Day, Vanity Fair, Collier's, and The Saturday Evening Post. |
Katherine Sproehnle | 75,676,367 | Personal life | In 1926, Sproehnle married Alfred Rheinstein, a construction company owner and housing official in New York City. They had three children, including television news producer Frederic Rheinstein. Her husband died in 1974, and she died in 1976, at the age of 81, in New York City. Designer Kate Rheinstein Brodsky is her granddaughter. |
Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | The Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture is an architecture prize presented annually by the Tasmania Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects (AIA) since the inaugural award was presented in 2010. The award recognises significant, long lasting and innovative architecture with usually more than 25 years passed since the completion of construction. |
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Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | Background | The Enduring Architecture Award recognises achievement for the design of buildings of outstanding merit, which have remained important as high quality works of architecture when considered in contemporary cultural, social, economic and environmental contexts in the state of Tasmania. Nominations for the award can be made by AIA members, non–members and non–architects, but they must provide adequate material and information supporting the nomination for consideration of the jury. The award was initially known as the 25 Year Award, but was renamed in line with the national and other state based awards in 2013. |
Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | Background | The average age of the 13 projects recognised to from 2010 to 2023 is 41.4 years from completion of construction to year of award. |
Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | National Award Winners | Recipients of the state–based award are eligible for consideration of the National Award for Enduring Architecture presented later in the same year, as part of the Australian National Architecture Awards. |
Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | National Award Winners | Only one project located in Tasmania has won the national award. In 2010 the Supreme Court Complex in Salamanca Place, Hobart by the Department of Public Works (Architect Peter Partridge) won both the state and national award 35 years after the building was completed in 1975. |
Tasmania Award for Enduring Architecture | 75,676,374 | List of award recipients | |
William Carr (footballer, born 1901) | 75,676,378 | William Paterson Carr (6 November 1901 – April 1990) was a English professional footballer who played as a full-back, he is most notable for playing for Derby County. |
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William Carr (footballer, born 1901) | 75,676,378 | Career | Born in Cambois, Carr grew up in the North East and played football locally at Seaton Delaval, before being signed by professional Football League club Derby County in February 1924. |
William Carr (footballer, born 1901) | 75,676,378 | Career | At Derby, Carr would play 109 times for club, where he would play a part in Derby's promotion campaign to the First Division in the 1925–26 season. He also helped the club finish runners-up in the 1929–30 league championship. |
William Carr (footballer, born 1901) | 75,676,378 | Career | After leaving Derby, Carr would have spells at Queens Park Rangers and Barrow before retiring from the game. |
William Carr (footballer, born 1901) | 75,676,378 | Death | Carr died in April 1990, aged 88 in Derby. |
Shaniel Thomas | 75,676,380 | Shaniel Thomas (born 14 September 2001) is a Jamaican footballer who plays as a forward for Cavalier and the Jamaica national football team. |
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Shaniel Thomas | 75,676,380 | Career | Thomas attended the traditional all-boys high school Jamaica College where he began his football career playing schoolboy football in the Manning Cup competition. Thomas helped Jamaica College to their fifth consecutive Manning Cup title in 2017 by scoring a goal in the finals. |
Shaniel Thomas | 75,676,380 | Career | Thomas made his debut with Cavalier in the 2018–19 season. |
Shaniel Thomas | 75,676,380 | Career | Thomas bagged his first hat-trick of his career and the first in CONCACAF Caribbean Cup history in Cavalier’s 3-0 win over Moca of the Dominican Republic, in the group stage of the 2023 CONCACAF Caribbean Cup. Thomas scored another hat-trick in the following fixture versus Golden Lion, becoming the only player in the competition to score back-to-back hat-tricks. Though Thomas was sent off in the finals of the competition, he still finished as the top goal scorer with 8 goals. Thomas was praised by head coach, Rudolph Speid, for his performace in the competition. |
Shaniel Thomas | 75,676,380 | Career | As a reward of for his impressive form at the 2023 CONCACAF Caribbean Cup, Thomas earned his first call-up to the Jamaica national team to face Guatemala in an international friendly at the Red Bull Arena in New Jersey. Thomas came on as a substitute replacing Tyreek Magee in the 83rd minute. |
Temim Ibn Ziri | 75,676,388 | Abu Kamal Tamim bin Ziri bin Ya'la Al-Yafrani, was the leader of the Berber Zenata tribe known as Banu Ifren from 1029 to 1035 during the Middle Ages in the Maghreb. He is the grandson of Yala Ibn Mohammed. |
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Temim Ibn Ziri | 75,676,388 | Life | He is known for the construction of the Grand Mosque of Salé in 1028, which was later reconstructed by the Almohads in the 12th century. |
Temim Ibn Ziri | 75,676,388 | Life | In 1033, Fez, Morocco, under Maghrawa leader Hammama, Temim, leading the Banu Ifran, sent troops, seized Fez from the Maghrawa, and forcing Hammama to flee to Oujda. There, Temim perpetrated violence, killing 6,000 Moroccan Jews, seizing their possessions, burning Their homes, and enslaving Their women. Hammama Rallied his forces and reconquered fez in 1039 |
Glanzberg | 75,676,389 | Glanzberg is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
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Sunnyside Cemetery | 75,676,398 | Sunnyside Cemetery, is a cemetery established in 1906 in Long Beach, California. It is adjacent to Long Beach Municipal Cemetery. |
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Sunnyside Cemetery | 75,676,398 | The cemetery encountered financial troubles in the 1990s when its owner, Dean A. Dempsey, stole over half the cemetery's endowment fund. |
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August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | August Moon (August 7, 1937 - July 12, 2023) was an American R&B singer known as Mr. Wiggles, a songwriter, producer, record label owner, and community activist. |
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August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Early Years | August Moon was born Alexander Randolph in a two-room shack in the Blackwell neighborhood on the Southside of Richmond, Virginia. His father was Freddie Price and his mother was Gladys Randolph Crawley. Moon was one of five siblings. He was raised for the most part by his great-grandmother. As a child he danced for tips on the streets of Richmond, where he got the nickname Mr. Wiggles. He said it was all about the moves, claiming no one could outdance him. Asked by interviewer Nick Spitzer in 2004 if he could dance, Mr. Wiggles told him, "I can do more tricks with my body than a monkey does with a peanut." Moon recalled how as a ten-year-old he "used to carry groceries, shine shoes, (and) carry newspapers" to make money. He and his friends formed a washboard band, and "I'd sing and dance and play a little plastic saxophone." Moon got into minor scrapes, and was made a ward of the state because he didn't have a father. He was put into the Hanover Juvenile Correctional Center for three years. After his release in 1954, he joined the U.S. Navy and served four years on the aircraft carrier USS Midway. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Music career | Upon returning to Richmond, Moon had success in talent shows hosted by disc jockey Allen Knight at the Hippodrome Theater. Knight helped guide Moon into a career as a singer, which led to performing on package tours with Ruth Brown, Chuck Berry and Fats Domino. He moved to New Jersey and performed in the New York area. Besides being known as Mr. Wiggles, Moon worked using other names including Little Red and Dickie Diamond. He later recounted how he was scheduled to appear on Alan Freed's TV show "The Big Beat" the day Freed's payola scandal broke, but never got his chance. In the mid-1960s he recorded a series of singles at Bell Sound Studios in New York City as Mr. Wiggles, including his signature song "Home Boy", a paean to his hometown. He also laid down tracks in Philadelphia and Muscle Shoals. Moon had a few regional hits, including "Fat Back" and "Wash My Back". He taught himself about studio production and learned to operate sound equipment, releasing his own music as well as recordings of his protegees. The first time he worked in a studio was on tracks by the Upsetters, formerly Little Richard's backup band. Moon said of his own trademark "Fatback" sound, "Fatback ain't nothing but bottom- baritone and bass." He started several record labels in the 1960s, including Sound of Soul, Soul International, and Golden Triangle, releasing his own discs as Mr. Wiggles and others for such R&B artists as Little Tommy, Larry Saunders, Dickie Wonder, and Sebastian Williams. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Music career | Moon is best known for the 1976 album by The Whole Darn Family, a group he managed, recorded, and produced. At the height of their fame the band toured the U.S. and appeared on the music program "Soul Train". Their album "The Whole Darn Family Has Arrived" featured an integrated R&B band playing original material. Bassist Woudy Hughes played the funky bass part on track four "Seven Minutes Of Funk", a song sampled in 51 subsequent recordings by artists such as Jay-Z, Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, Busta Rhymes, Public Enemy, and Wu-Tang Clan. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Music career | In the 1980s Moon started Urban Beat and Style Records, among Richmond's first rap labels. He released recordings by acts including Cool Carl, American Express, and M.C. Rockwale. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Legal Problems | Moon twice served time in prison in New Jersey. In the early 1960s he was sentenced for selling drugs. He also served four years in the 1970s for a second degree murder conviction. He filed suit in the United States Court of Claims in 1981 against the Department of Justice's Witness Protection Program for breach of an alleged implied contract. Moon claimed that in return for his testimony against organized figures and corrupt government officials the Department of Justice promised him money and new identities for him and his family. The case was dismissed after the court ruled that participants in the Witness Protection Program have no contractual rights with the United States of a nature to be enforceable in the United States Court of Claims. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Later Years | Virginia governor Douglas Wilder restored Moon's voting rights in 1993. Four years later then-governor George Allen proclaimed August 7, 1997 as August Moon Day for his "remarkable and adventurous life" and "the many contributions he made to the people of the Commonwealth." His lifelong support of his Blackwell neighborhood gained him the sobriquet "Mayor of Hull Street". "He wasn't afraid to say it like it was, and people didn't boss him around," former governor Wilder said of August Moon. J.J. Minor, president of the Richmond branch of the NAACP, called Moon "an icon, a legend, a mentor, a man who was not afraid to stand up for what's right." He hosted a public access TV program called "Tell It Like It Is", dealing with community and political issues, reminding his audience that "if you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything." Moon told writer Vernal Coleman, "All my life I wanted to be an activist. I didn't want to be a politician. I didn't want to be a preacher. I just want to be what I am, in show business and an activist." |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Later Years | Moon died at age 85 on July 12, 2023, after a long illness. He was survived by his wife Michon, formerly the Victim-Witness program director of the Office of the Commonwealth's Attorney, and his two daughters, Dr. Sesha Joi Moon, the director of the Office of Diversity and Inclusion with the U.S. House of Representatives and Enjoli Moon, assistant curator for film and public programs at VCU's Institute for Contemporary Art, and the founder and organizer of Richmond's Afrikana Film Festival. August Moon was buried on the Southside of Richmond in Maury Cemetery. |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Mr. Wiggles & His Sound Of Soul Family – Sound Of Soul Records (2002) CD |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Mr. Wiggles Instrumental Soul – Sound Of Soul Records (2003) CD- SOS 115 |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Mr. Wiggles Again – Sound Of Soul Records (2004) CD- SOS 1002 |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Mr. Wiggles Classic Soul – Sound Of Soul Records (2004) CD |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Mr. Wiggles A Classic Soul Journey – Sound Of Soul Records CD |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Where Did Peace Go – Sound Of Soul Records (2005) CD |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | Discography | Lookey Dookey- Rhythm & Blooz Records (Germany) CD- CR-CD-TTRB 5463 |
August Moon (Mr. Wiggles) | 75,676,401 | References | |
Paul Perrin | 75,676,407 | Paul Douglas Perrin (born 26 March 1940) is an Australian former rugby union international. |
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Paul Perrin | 75,676,407 | Perrin is the son of 1930s Wallabies number eight Tom Perrin. He was born in the Sydney suburb of Pymble and educated at The Southport School on the Gold Coast in Queensland. |
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Paul Perrin | 75,676,407 | A lock, Perrin played for the Brisbane based GPS club and was capped once for the Wallabies, against the All Blacks at the Brisbane Exhibition Ground in 1962, with Rob Heming unavailable. |
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Paul Perrin | 75,676,407 | Perrin was the inaugural captain-coach of the Gold Coast Eagles in the Queensland Sub-District competition. |
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West Georgia (region) | 75,676,417 | West Georgia is a sixteen-county region in the U.S. state of Georgia, bordering Alabama. Encompassing a portion of the Southern Rivers, West Georgia is anchored by Columbus, the state's second-largest city by population; its metropolitan statistical area, as of 2020, was Georgia's fourth-most populous metropolitan area. Tabulating the region's counties, West Georgia had a 2020 U.S. census population of 368,953. |
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West Georgia (region) | 75,676,417 | Geography | According to the Georgia Department of Economic Development, West Georgia made up the following counties: Chattahoochee, Clay, Crisp, Dooly, Harris, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Quitman, Randolph, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Talbot, Taylor, and Webster. |
Itsik Vaynshenker | 75,676,438 | Itsik Vaynshenker (Yiddish: איציק װײַנשענקער; 1914–1 December 1978), born as Yitskhok Vaynshenker (Yiddish: יצחק װײַנשענקער), was a Bessarabian Jewish writer, journalist, and literary critic. He was renowned in the Uruguayan Jewish writer circles following World War II. |
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Sean Griffin | 75,676,450 | Sean Griffin is a critical queer film theory scholar and professor at the Meadows School of the Arts. His work includes Tinker Belles and Evil Queens: The Walt Disney Company from the Inside Out, which was adapted from his dissertation. |
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Sean Griffin | 75,676,450 | Tinker Belles and Evil Queens | Tinker Belles and Evil Queens (2000) suggests that The Walt Disney Company, despite having a focus on heterocentric "family values" in its films, has long attracted gay audiences, particularly through queercoding and gay subtext of its films. It was described by journalist Nico Lang of Harper's Bazaar as "the book on the gay history of Disney". According to Jonathan Alexander, Griffin argues that Disney did this out of economic considerations of LGBT consumers paying for Disney products. |
Sean Griffin | 75,676,450 | Tinker Belles and Evil Queens | In 2023, Hbomberguy accused James Somerton of plagarising text from Griffin's Tinker Belles in one of his YouTube video essays. |
The Park Bench | 75,676,451 | The Park Bench is a 2014 American romantic comedy film directed by Ann LeSchander, starring Walter Perez and Nikki Danielle Moore. |
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The Park Bench | 75,676,451 | Reception | Katie Walsh of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film is a "sweet tale with a smart storytelling device and charming performers, but not much more beyond the cute." |
The Park Bench | 75,676,451 | Reception | Scott Tovias of Variety praised the performances of Perez and Moore but wrote that LeSchander "barely skims the surface of her book-smarts and his street-smarts, much less the cultural forces that keep them apart." |
The Park Bench | 75,676,451 | Reception | Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter also praised the performances of Perez and Moore but wrote that the "narrative skimpiness makes their efforts for naught." |
Lili (wrestler) | 75,676,484 | Lili (born 2000) is a Chinese freestyle wrestler of Mongol ethnicity. She won a bronze medal in the 65kg event at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships held in Belgrade, Serbia. |
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Lili (wrestler) | 75,676,484 | Background | Lili was born in 2000 and is from Tongliao, Inner Mongolia in China. |
Lili (wrestler) | 75,676,484 | Background | In 2017, Lili joined the Inner Mongolia provincial wrestling team. |
Lili (wrestler) | 75,676,484 | Background | In 2020, Lili was admitted as an undergraduate to Inner Mongolia University for Nationalities where she majored in Physical education. |
Lili (wrestler) | 75,676,484 | Background | In 2023, Lili won a bronze medal in the 65kg event at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships by defeating Kadriye Aksoy. |
Eutaw House | 75,676,487 | Eutaw House was a notable 19th-century hotel of Baltimore, Maryland in the United States. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | Augusta Merrill Hunt (1842-1932) was an American philanthropist, suffragist, and temperance leader. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | Augusta Merrill Barstow was born in Portland, Me., 6th June, 1842. She was the youngest daughter of George S. and Ellen Merrill Barston, of Portland, Me. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | In 1863 she married George S. Hunt, a prominent and successful merchant of Portland. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | She was identified with many of the prominent charitable organizations of Portland, notably that of the Portland Fraternity, the Associated Charities, the Home for Aged Women, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Woman's Suffrage Association. For seven years she served as the president of the Ladies' History Club, the first literary society organized by the women of Portland, which was originated in 1874. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | In the spring of 1876 a public meeting was called in Portland, composed of two women delegates from each church in the city, to consider the feasibility of forming a Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Mrs. Hunt was present as one of the representatives from the First Universalist Church, and was called to preside over the meeting, and when, as its result, the Woman's Temperance Society was formed, the members called her to the position of president Under her direction the coffee-house, diet kitchen and diet mission and the flower mission were successfully organized and carried forward. |
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Augusta Merrill Hunt | 75,676,492 | In 1878 the society became auxiliary to the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.). Mrs. Hunt continued as its president. Three times, she held the position of national superintendent in the W.C.T.U., the last department being that of higher education. In 1890, she was obliged to resign that position on account of ill health. In 1884, she was appointed by the governor of Maine as a member of the Reform School Committee. At the end of three years she declined a re-appointment on account of the pressure of other duties. In 1873, after the death of her mother, Hunt assumed the placement made vacant on the board of managers of the Home for Aged Women, and in 1889, was unanimously elected president of that association. She appeared several times before the Maine legislative committee in advocacy of the establishment of a reformatory prison for women in Maine, of better laws for the protection of young girls, of municipal suffrage for women, and of the cottage system in the Reform School for Boys. |
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Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | The Canada Water Agency (French: Agence canadienne de l'eau) is an agency of the Government of Canada responsible for freshwater governance. It coordinates and administers federal programs and policies relating to the management and conservation of freshwater ecosystems. |
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Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | History | The establishment of a federal water agency was a part of the Liberal platform during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's campaign for both the 2019 and 2021 elections. After the Liberals won in 2021, the initiative was included in the mandate letter to Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | History | The founding of the agency was officially announced by Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland as part of the 2022 budget. The 2023 budget provided 85.5 million in funding to establish the agency. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | History | The Canada Water Agency was established as a part of Environment Canada in 2023, with legislation planned later that year to elevate it to a stand-alone agency. In November 2023, legislation formally establishing the agency was tabled by Freeland as part of the 2023 Fall Economic Statement. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | History | The agency's first major initiative is to lead the modernization of the Canada Water Act. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | Organization and functions | The agency is headquartered in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It is currently co-located with Environment Canada in the department's office in the city, with a agency-specific site planned for the future. The Agency will also have regional offices in Vancouver, Toronto, Quebec City, and Halifax. Like other Canadian government agencies, it is responsible to Parliament through a minister, namely the Minister of Environment and Climate Change. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | Organization and functions | The role of the agency is to assist the Minister in exercising their powers and functions relating to freshwater, particularly under the Department of the Environment Act and the Canada Water Act, and the Minister delegates their powers to the agency to this effect. The Canada Water Agency is not a law enforcement agency, nor does it directly wield any regulatory power. Instead, it focuses on coordination and funding. It also provides policy advice and expertise, an example of which is the modernization of the Canada Water Act, the agency's first major initiative. |
Canada Water Agency | 75,676,528 | Organization and functions | The Agency administers several programs that fund conservation and restoration of freshwater resources. These include EcoAction, a program that provides grants to nonprofit, non-governmental organizations for local projects that improve water quality and freshwater ecosystem health. As well as lake-specific restoration plans, such as the Great Lakes Freshwater Ecosystem Initiative. |
2023–24 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team | 75,676,548 | The 2023–24 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team represents Jacksonville University during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Dolphins, led by first-year head coach Special Jennings, play their home games at Swisher Gymnasium located in Jacksonville, Florida as members of the ASUN Conference. |
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2023–24 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team | 75,676,548 | Previous season | The Dolphins finished the 2022–23 season 12–17, 6–12 in ASUN play to finish in a tie for ninth place. As the #10 seed in the ASUN tournament, they were defeated by #9 seed Stetson in the first round. |
2023–24 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team | 75,676,548 | Previous season | On March 15, 2023, the school announced that head coach Darnell Haney would be departing after 5 years with the program. On April 10, Montverde Academy women's basketball head coach Special Jennings was named as Haney's successor. |
2023–24 Jacksonville Dolphins women's basketball team | 75,676,548 | Schedule and results | Sources: |
Jazz for the Carriage Trade | 75,676,559 | Jazz for the Carriage Trade is a 1956 album recorded by George Wallington's quintet with Donald Byrd on trumpet and Phil Woods on alto saxophone and released by Prestige Records the same year. The pianist and the front line were joined by Teddy Kotick on bass and Art Taylor on drums to make up the rhythm section. |
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Jazz for the Carriage Trade | 75,676,559 | Reception | Jazz critic Scott Yanow noted, "The music falls between bebop and hard bop with Woods sounding quite strong while Byrd comes across as a promising (but not yet mature) youngster. A fine example of this somewhat forgotten but talented group, easily recommended to bop collectors." Richard Cook of The Penguin Guide to Jazz gave the album 3 of 4 stars, describing it as more straight-ahead than Wallington's album The New York Scene. |
Jazz for the Carriage Trade | 75,676,559 | Track listing | All compositions by George Wallington unless otherwise indicated |
Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Juanita Urrea Posada (born September 13, 2000) is a Colombian industrial engineer, model and beauty pageant titleholder who was the 3rd Runner-Up of Miss Colombia 2022. She will represent Colombia at Miss International 2024. |
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Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Early life | Juanita Urrea was born in Armenia, Quindío on September 13, 2000. She is the only child of Andrea Posada and the industrial engineer Alonso Urrea, during her childhood and youth she lived between Buenaventura, Cartago and Cali where she finished her high school studies at the Colegio Hispanoamericano. |
Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Early life | Later she completed her university studies at the ICESI University in the undergraduate degree in Industrial Engineering. In addition to her native Spanish, she speaks fluent English. |
Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Pageantry | Juanita was designated as Miss Valle after an evaluative process of interviews, photographs and general and intellectual preparation. |
Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Pageantry | On November 13, 2022, the final of Miss Colombia (National Beauty Contest) was held in Cartagena where Juanita achieved the title of Segunda Princesa Nacional (3rd Runner-Up), with Sofía Osío de Atlántico being the winner of the contest. |
Juanita Urrea | 75,676,576 | Pageantry | After the 2023 edition of the Miss Colombia was canceled, which would be held as usual in November of the same year in the city of Cartagena, On December 29, 2023, the contest's board of directors made the decision to designate Juanita Urrea as the representative of Colombia in the Japanese Miss International contest for the 2024 edition. |
Turība Station | 75,676,577 | Turība Station is a station on the Riga-Jelgava railway line in Riga, Latvia. It was made to serve the Turība University, so all trains stop at the station, excluding diesel trains to Liepaja and Vilnius. |
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Turība Station | 75,676,577 | The station was opened August 29, 2003. |
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Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Arthur Guo is an American chess grandmaster. |
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Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Chess career | In 2018, Guo founded Eagle Chess School along with his older sister Ingrid. The school aims to provide chess camps to underprivileged children in the metropolitan Atlanta area. |
Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Chess career | In July 2018, Guo earned the International Master title, and was the youngest American to hold the title until surpassed by Christopher Yoo just six months later. |
Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Chess career | In June 2021, Guo won the National Open in Las Vegas ahead of Illia Nyzhnyk, Andrew Hong, Emilio Córdova, and Lázaro Bruzón due to having the best tiebreaker results. |
Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Chess career | Guo won the Denker Tournament of High School Champions in both 2022 and 2023. In August 2023, he won the tournament with a perfect score of 6/6. |
Arthur Guo | 75,676,602 | Chess career | In June 2023, Guo achieved his final GM norm at the First Saturday GM Norm Tournament in Budapest, scoring five wins and four draws with a final score of 7/9. |
Lin Carter's Flashing Swords! 8 | 75,676,605 | Lin Carter's Flashing Swords! #8 is an anthology of fantasy stories in the sword and sorcery subgenre, edited by Robert M. Price. It was first published in trade paperback and ebook by Cushing Publishing in December 2023. |
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Lin Carter's Flashing Swords! 8 | 75,676,605 | Summary | The book collects several stories by several authors, featuring sword and sorcery protagonists Thongor of Valkarth, Simon of Gitta, Duar the Accursed, Ki-Gor, White Lord of the Jungle, Kothar of the Magic Sword, Elak of Atlantis, Tara of the Twilight, Ansell of the Dreamlands, Varla of Valkarth, and Tonga of Lost Lemuria. |
Lāči Station | 75,676,624 | Lāči is a train station on the Jelgava–Liepāja railway in Latvia. Trains do not serve the station. |
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Baba dan Nyonya | 75,676,632 | The Peranakans (/pəˈrɑːnəˌkɑːn, -kən/) are an ethnic group defined by their genealogical descent from the first waves of Southern Chinese settlers to maritime Southeast Asia, known as Nanyang (Chinese: 南洋; pinyin: nán yáng; lit. 'Southern Ocean'), namely the British Colonial ruled ports in the Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian Archipelago, as well as Singapore. Peranakan culture, especially in the dominant Peranakan centres of Malacca, Singapore, Penang, Phuket and Tangerang, is characterized by its unique hybridization of ancient Chinese culture with the local cultures of the Nusantara region, the result of a centuries-long history of transculturation and interracial marriage. |
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