title
stringlengths 1
182
| passage_id
int64 12
4.55M
| section_title
stringlengths 0
402
| text
stringlengths 0
99.6k
|
---|---|---|---|
Mariam Solaimankhil | 75,690,858 | Personal views | Solaimankhil is a Taliban opponent and called the group "proxy of Pakistan" and "don't represent any particular ethnicity or locality in Afghanistan." |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Teloschistaceae. It is found in Australia. The lichen has a squamulose (scaly) thallus, with a range of bright yellow to greenish-yellow and brownish-orange colours in its soredia (powdery propagules) and apothecia (fruiting bodies), respectively. The areoles of this lichen are varied in size, slightly raised from the thallus surface, and each carries one to four apothecia. The soralia are rounded or irregularly shaped, covering most of the thallus surface as a yellow to greenish-yellow mass. The apothecia have dark brownish-orange discs, surrounded by slightly paler yellow margins, with the spore-bearing asci containing typically eight brownish-golden ascospores. |
|
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Taxonomy | It was formally described as a new species in 2009 by the lichenologists Sergey Kondratyuk and Ingvar Kärnefelt, who initially classified it as a member of the genus Caloplaca. The type specimen was collected by Kondratyuk in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne, Victoria. The specimen was found near the "Temple of the Winds" and "Plant Craft Cottage buildings," amid 'grey plants' and succulents, growing on volcanic rocks known as tuffs. It was growing alongside Filsoniana rexfilsonii, which, at the time, was also a member of Caloplaca. In 2013, the taxon Caloplaca ferdinandmuelleri was formally transferred to the newly proposed genus Filsoniana, as part of a molecular phylogenetics-informed restructuring of the family Teloschistaceae. Gintaras Kantvilas (who prefers to maintain this taxon in a broadly defined genus Caloplaca) suggests that it is likely a sorediate counterpart to Filsoniana rexfilsonii. |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Description | Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri is characterised by its squamulose thallus, which has a vibrant colour palette ranging from bright yellow to greenish-yellow soredia (powdery vegetative propagules) and brownish-orange apothecia (fruiting bodies). The areoles of this lichen, measuring between 0.4 and 2.7 mm in width and 100 to 200 μm in thickness, contain palisade inclusions. Initially, these areoles lie close to the substrate but gradually become more raised, with their edges curling upwards. The upper surface of the areoles is uneven, with a brownish-yellow to dull yellow colouration. Typically, each areole bears one to four apothecia and one to five conidiomata (asexual reproductive structures), either separately or in combination. |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Description | The soralia measure between 0.1 and 0.2 mm in diameter, and are found along the edges or at the ends of the upper thallus surface. They are rounded to irregular in shape, with a sorediose mass covering most of the surface. This mass is bright yellow to greenish-yellow in colour, and the soredia within are approximately round, measuring between 20 and 25 μm in diameter. |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Description | The apothecia of Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri are 0.3 to 0.7 mm in diameter and 0.2 to 0.25 mm thick. They are scattered or weakly aggregated, featuring dark brownish-orange discs that lack a powdery coating (pruina) and are surrounded by slightly paler yellowish margins. The true exciple (the outer layer of the apothecium) varies from scleroplectenchymatous to somewhat paraplectenchymatous in structure. The asci (spore-bearing structures) typically contain eight spores, which are often brownish-golden in colour. These ascospores have widely rounded ends, measuring between 13 and 17 μm in length and 6 to 8 μm in width, with moderately thick septa ranging from 3 to 6 μm. The conidiomata of this lichen are 40 to 50 μm in diameter, with long, rod-shaped conidia measuring 4 to 5.5 μm by 0.8 to 1 μm. |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Description | Chemically, the epithecium of Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri reacts to potassium hydroxide (i.e., the K spot test) by turning purple. It contains several secondary metabolites (lichen products), including parietin as the major constituent, along with argopsin, atranorin, teloschistin, fallacinal as minor components, and traces of parietinic acid. |
Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri | 75,690,859 | Habitat and distribution | Filsoniana ferdinandmuelleri has been identified in a few scattered locations across Western Australia, Victoria, and Tasmania, suggesting a distribution that spans significant parts of southeastern and southwestern Australia. It is typically found growing on terrestrial substrates, particularly favouring dolerite and volcanic rocks. In these environments, it is often found in association with other lichen species such as F. rexfilsonii and Kuettlingeria atroflava. On Kangaroo Island, it has been recorded growing on siliceous rocks (including sandstone) in mallee woodland. |
Dudley Higgins | 75,690,863 | James Arthur Dudley Higgins, known as Dudley Higgins, (20 May 1920 - 30 December 1999) was an Irish international rugby union player and administrator. He played club rugby for Civil Service Rugby Club and the Ireland national rugby union team as a fullback. He served as president of Ulster Rugby and multiple terms as president of the Irish Rugby Football Union. |
|
Dudley Higgins | 75,690,863 | History | Higgins was born in Rathdrum, County Wicklow. He attended Mountjoy School in Dublin and later moved to Northern Ireland during the Second World War to work for the Northern Ireland Civil Service, eventually becoming the Assistant Secretary in the Department of Health. During this time, he played club rugby for Civil Service. During the 40s, he also played provincial rugby for Ulster. During this time, he was called up to play for the Ireland national rugby union team, making his debut in 1947 against Scotland in 1947. He was a part of Ireland's successful 1948 Five Nations Championship where Ireland won their first Grand Slam, missing only the game against England and earning the last of his six international caps in the process. |
Dudley Higgins | 75,690,863 | History | After retiring from playing, Higgins became the president of the Ulster branch of the IRFU in 1960. He would later serve as the vice-president of the IRFU in 1975 but would take over as president following the death of Jim Keane after 12 days. Higgins would serve the rest of Keane's term and was elected for his own term as president in 1976. Following these roles, he would act as treasurer for Ulster and as a selector for Ireland for four year. In 1996, both Higgins and fellow 1948 Grand Slam winner Bertie O'Hanlon were inducted into the Rugby Writers of Ireland Hall of Fame. |
Dudley Higgins | 75,690,863 | History | Higgins died on 30 December 1999, being survived by his wife and two children. |
Yolonda Fountain Henderson | 75,690,864 | Yolonda Fountain Henderson (born c. 1965) is an American politician. She has served as a member of the Missouri House of Representatives from the 85th district since 2023. A member of the Democratic Party, she previously served as mayor of Jennings, Missouri, between 2015 and 2016. |
|
Yolonda Fountain Henderson | 75,690,864 | Political career | Henderson was elected mayor of the city of Jennings, Missouri, in April 2015. Shortly after being sworn in as mayor, she filed a lawsuit against the city council and several top city officials. |
Yolonda Fountain Henderson | 75,690,864 | Political career | In February 2016, articles of impeachment were written, which cited 19 allegations against Henderson; it was down to 12 by the time of her impeachment. On May 24, the city council voted to impeach Henderson through a unanimous vote. Francine Dugger succeeded her as mayor pro tempore. |
Yolonda Fountain Henderson | 75,690,864 | Political career | Henderson was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 2022. She was unopposed in the general election. |
Neill Latimer | 75,690,896 | Neill Buchanan Latimer (5 September 1930 — 2 February 2012) was an Australian rugby union international. |
|
Neill Latimer | 75,690,896 | Educated at Knox Grammar School, Latimer was a towering lock and played his rugby for Sydney club Gordon. |
|
Neill Latimer | 75,690,896 | Latimer's early career in first-grade rugby was limited due to his work, at a remote cattle station in Queensland, missing the entire 1955 and 1956 seasons for Gordon. As such it was a surprise when he received a call up by the Wallabies in 1957 for a home series against the All Blacks, with his only previous representative experience being for the City seconds. He was capped in the 2nd Test in Brisbane as a replacement for injured captain Alan Cameron. |
|
1987 Virginia Slims of San Diego – Doubles | 75,690,919 | Beth Herr and Alycia Moulton were the defending champions, but Herr did not compete this year. Moulton teamed up with Elizabeth Minter and lost in the first round to Elly Hakami and Christina Singer. |
|
1987 Virginia Slims of San Diego – Doubles | 75,690,919 | Jana Novotná and Catherine Suire won the title by defeating Elise Burgin and Sharon Walsh 6–3, 6–4 in the final. |
|
1987 Virginia Slims of San Diego – Doubles | 75,690,919 | Seeds | All seeds received a bye into the second round. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Andrée Dupeyron (née Mailho) (19 October 1902 - 22 July 1988) was a French woamn civil and military aviator who broke distance records in the 1930s and flew for the Free French Air Force and the Premier corps de pilotes militaires feminins. |
|
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Julie Victorine Andréa Eugénie Mailho was born on 19 October 1902 in Ivry-sur-Seine, Paris, the daughter of a working class family. Her father died fighting in the First World War and in 1916 she started work in a munitions factory making ammunition shells. She met her future husband, the mechanic Gustave Dupeyron, at the age of 16 when he was working at the l’école d’aviation de Pau. They married at the end of the First World War. Passionate about mechanics, the couple soon became interested in aircraft. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | In 1920, after the birth of their first child, René, the Dupeyron family moved to Gustave's home town of Mont-de-Marsan in Landes and settled there, having a daughter Jacqueline. They opened a car repair shop and then bought a garage in Dax. The Dupeyrons agreed that Andrée would look after the latter and Gustave would manage the workshop in Mont-de-Marsan. When he could, he spent time at the Aéro-club des Landes next door to the workshop. The aeroclub had been created in 1928 by Henri Farbos. The aviation bug caught the whole family and they bought a plane, a Potez 43. Gustave Dupeyron earned his pilot's licence in 1932, followed by Andrée in 1933. She was the second woman pilot at the Aéro-club de Mont-de-Marsan after the famous aviator Hélène Boucher. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Flying career |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Andrée Dupeyron earned her amateur pilot's licence and then her professional pilot's licence. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | The couple sold their garage in Dax and set up an aircraft repair workshop in a hangar in Mont-de-Marsan. Andrée Dupeyron upgraded her plane to a Caudron Aiglon, better suited to her ambition of breaking the straight-line distance record. In 1936 and 1937, she took part in the Hélène Boucher Cup race and the Mont-de-Marsan - Marseille - Tours - Paris international rally. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | n 16 May 1938, Dupeyron broke the women's record for non-stop straight-line distance. She flew 4,360 km from Oran in Algeria to Tel El Aham in Iraq in a Caudron C-600 Bengali 6.351 l aircraft, a civilian tourist aircraft converted to fly long distances. She beat the women's straight-line distance record recently set by Élisabeth Lion. She ended up stranded in the desert. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | On 31 December 1938 Dupeyron broke another record, for distance in a straight line without landing, flying 1678km from Tunis in Tunisia to Mersa Matroh in Egypt in the same aircraft. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Achieving these world records made the 36-year-old mother a heroine throughout the France. She was nicknamed La mère de famille volante for her speed. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | With her husband, Dupeyron was one of the first to join the Aviation Populaire des Landes club, founded in 1936 at the instigation of the Front Populaire, which sought to promote and establish aviation among the working classes. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Second World War |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | With the outbreak of the Second World War, |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Dupeyron enlisted in 1939, and after being demobilised with the Fall of France, she joined the Resistance. She flew as a pilot in the Free French Air Force during the Second World War and was sponsor of a squadron that bore her name. One of her sons was also a military pilot in the Free French Air Forces. She hid the co-pilot of an American B17 in an attic in Place Saint-Roch, Mont-de-Marsan. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Dupeyron's life story inspired Jean Grémillon's 1944 film Le ciel est à vous (The Woman Who Dared in English) which was made during the Nazi occupation of France during the Second World War. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Charles de Gaulle's Air Minister, Charles Tillon, wanted to create a corps of female military pilots. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | During the winter of 1944-1945, Dupeyron was part of the first group of women pilots recruited for the Premier corps de pilotes militaires féminins (First Corps of Female Military Pilots) alongside Yvonne Jourjon, Elisabeth Lion and Maryse Bastié. Dupeyron trained at Kasba-Tadla Air Force School in Morocco, and qualified as a military pilot in 1945 with the rank of second lieutenant. In 1946 she became a student pilot at the Gliding Centre of Montagne Noire (France), the only woman in training there. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Post war |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | In 1949, she made another record attempt, flying from Mont-de-Marsan in France to Jiwani in Pakistan. She flew 5,932 km alone, after 31 hours and 23 minutes. Andrée Dupeyron was awarded the Légion d'honneur that same year. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Andrée Dupeyron died on 22 July 1988 and was buried in the cimetière du Centre de Mont-de-Marsan. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Commemoration |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | Promenade Andrée Dupeyron, a road in Lyon, is named in her honour. |
Andrée Dupeyron | 75,691,009 | Early life | A roundabout on Simone Veil boulevard in Mont-de-Marsan was named after Andrée Dupeyron in 2019, alongside two other roundabouts named for fellow women pilots Elisabeth Boselli and Adrienne Bolland. |
New Zealand men's national under-23 football team results (2020–present) | 75,691,038 | This article lists the results for the New Zealand men's national under-23 football team from 2020 to present. |
|
New Zealand men's national under-23 football team results (2020–present) | 75,691,038 | A-International results | New Zealand's score is shown first in each case. |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Sumaya Awad is a Palestinian American writer and activist based in New York City. She directs strategy and communications for Adalah Justice Project, and is co-editor of Palestine: A Socialist Introduction. |
|
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Activity | Awad is Director of Strategy and Communications for Adalah Justice Project. She co-edited the book Palestine: A Socialist Introduction. |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Activity | On October 13, 2023, Awad appeared on NY1 to discuss the 2023 Israel–Hamas war. |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Activity | “It’s just so astonishing that we have to be out here starving in the cold to relay the message that Palestinians deserve to live. And that Palestinians deserve to be grieved, just like any other person.” |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Activity | Sumaya Awad, The Washington Post |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Activity | On November 27, 2023, she joined more than 20 other Palestine solidarity activists and state legislators in a five-day-long hunger strike outside the White House to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. While most of the group joined for shorter periods of time, Awad was one of eight who did not eat for the entire five days. In a press conference announcing the hunger strike, she referenced the shooting of three Palestinian American students in Vermont, saying that "This is what happens when we don’t support a permanent ceasefire and our government continues to dehumanize Palestinians". She additionally emphasized the role of the United States government in supporting Israel, saying that "we are not just silent observers. We are complicit in what is happening in Palestine." By the fourth day of the strike, The Washington Post reported that Awad was exhausted and experiencing severe headaches, but determined to continue with the strike. |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Personal life | Awad lives in New York City. She has a young daughter, who spent time in a neonatal intensive care unit after birth; Awad has drawn parallels between her own daughter's experience and that of infants in the 2023 Gaza Strip preterm birth crisis. |
Sumaya Awad | 75,691,050 | Personal life | According to Awad, her grandfather's family lived in West Jerusalem before being expelled into Lebanon during the Nakba. |
Shooting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – P1 Men's 10 metre air pistol SH1 | 75,691,184 | The Men's 10 metre air pistol SH1 competition of the powerlifting events at the 2023 Parapan American Games was held on November 18 at Lo Aguirre Shooting Range (Polígono de Tiro de Pudahuel) in Santiago, Chile. |
|
Shooting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – P1 Men's 10 metre air pistol SH1 | 75,691,184 | Results | The best eight scores advance to the final: |
Shooting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – P1 Men's 10 metre air pistol SH1 | 75,691,184 | Results | The results were as follows: |
Ishwar Das Pawar | 75,691,226 | Ishwar Dass Pawar was the first Dalit to be appointed to the Punjab Judicial Service before the Independence of India. Throughout his professional life, he held several important positions. In 1932, he joined the Punjab Civil Services (Judicial) as a judge, then was promoted as undersecretary to the Government of Punjab. He remained a member of the Punjab Subordinate Services Selection for 8 years and retired as a district and session judge in 1966. He also worked as a presiding officer for the Industrial Tribunal for Punjab. |
|
Ishwar Das Pawar | 75,691,226 | Personal life | He was born into the Ad Dharmi family on 09 May 2010, in Dehlan, Punjab. He studied B.A. and L.L.B. from D.A.V. College, Lahore, and joined Judicial Services in 1932. He was married to Lakshmi Devi, and the couple had three sons and two daughters. His one daughter, Kamlesh, is married to an Indian diplomat, Ambassador V.B. Soni (retd). He passed away on 11 June 2007 in Chandigarh. |
Ishwar Das Pawar | 75,691,226 | Social work to uplift the downtrodden | During his work as presiding officer for the Industrial Tribunal, he helped many Dalits get plots of land for the establishment of businesses. He also helped many educated Dalit youths in Doaba get passports to travel to the U.K. in the 1950s. |
Ishwar Das Pawar | 75,691,226 | References | |
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | Alice Bell Le Geyt (1839-1934) was a British writer, suffragist and temperance campaigner. |
|
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | Le Geyt was born on Jersey in 1839. Her parents were Charles William Le Geyt and Emma Bell, and her grandfather was the Scottish surgeon Charles Bell. |
|
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | On 4 August 1864, holidaying at Lyme Regis, she rowed through surf "at the risk of her life" to rescue two young boys who had fallen into the sea from the pier. She was awarded the Royal National Lifeboat Institution's silver medal for gallantry for this action. |
|
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | Le Geyt published a single three-volume novel, Which will triumph? in 1867. It concerns two young men, Henry and Herbert, who are rivals for the heart of a young woman, Alice, and has been described as "a tale of love, rivalry, and the struggle for personal fulfillment in a world that is changing rapidly". |
|
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | In 1871 Le Geyt became secretary of the newly-formed Bath committee of the Bristol and West Society of the National Society for Women's Suffrage. |
|
Alice Le Geyt | 75,691,240 | When Anna Kingsford became editor of the Lady's Own Paper for a few weeks in 1872, the first article to be published was by Le Geyt with the title "Coffee-Houses or Gin-Palaces". She wrote that she hoped to open a coffee-house herself, to "counter the evils of strong drink", and invited donations to support this, to be sent to her at her home: The Cottage, Corston, near Bristol. In October 1872 she opened a "model beerless public house", in Corston, called the Golden Coffee Pot. It was reported in Chicago's Religio-Philosophical Journal in 1879 that "it has been successfull in substituting coffee for beer among the poor, and upon Miss Le Geyt's recent departure from the place, many leading citizens presented her with a silver inkstand, in token of her efforts among them. |
|
Cornell Law School alumni | 75,691,242 | Following is a list of notable alumni of the Cornell Law School. |
|
Valgia gens | 75,691,253 | The gens Valgia was a minor plebeian family at ancient Rome. Members of this gens are first mentioned in the final century of the Republic. The most illustrious of the Valgii was Gaius Valgius Rufus, a poet contemporary with Horace, who became consul suffectus in 12 BC. |
|
Valgia gens | 75,691,253 | Origin | The nomen Valgius is derived from the surname Valgus, originally indicating someone with bow legs. |
Valgia gens | 75,691,253 | Branches and cognomina | The only cognomen among the Valgii mentioned in Roman authors was Rufus, originally referring to someone with red hair, and belonging to a large class of surnames derived from the physical features of an individual. |
1983 Cologne Cup – Singles | 75,691,278 | Kevin Curren was the defending champion, but did not compete this year. |
|
1983 Cologne Cup – Singles | 75,691,278 | Matt Doyle won the title by defeating Hans-Dieter Beutel 1–6, 6–1, 6–2 in the final. |
|
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Huntly Conway Plantz (born January 28, 2009) is an American actor from St. Petersburg, Florida. Huntly has performed voiceovers and has acted in independent movies, commercials, television shows and films for such companies as Home Shopping Network, Disney and Lifetime. |
|
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Career | Huntly has been acting since middle school. In eighth grade, he decided to pursue acting full time after winning a Critics Choice award for the Florida State Thespians Festival. |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Career | Huntly's first big role was in an independent short film, Out of Bounds. He attends the Dwight School online and his acting coach is Eugenie Bondurant. |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | Out of Bounds (2020) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | Quiver (2023) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | What's It All About (2024) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | Inventing Paradise (2024) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | Spirit of the Storm (2024) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | The Fold (2020) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | Taken In Montana (2023) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | The Slumber Party (2023) |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | Filmography | |
Huntly Plantz | 75,691,314 | External links | http://imdb.me/huntlyplantz |
Matthew Arranges Things | 75,691,322 | Matthew Arranges Things (Hungarian: Mátyás rendet csinál) is a 1940 Hungarian comedy film directed by Frigyes Bán and starring Gerö Mály, Margit Lukács and Lili Berky. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Klára B. Kokas. |
|
Le Geyt | 75,691,325 | Le Geyt is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
|
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | The Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum is an aviation museum located at Amelia Earhart Airport in Atchison, Kansas focused on Amelia Earhart. |
|
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | History | In 1979, Grace McGuire purchased a Lockheed 10-E, the last surviving "E" variant, from the Wings and Wheels Museum in Orlando, Florida. She intended to restore it to flight and use it to recreate Amelia Earhart's attempted circumnavigation. After trying and failing to interest Pratt & Whitney in supporting the effort and being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, McGuire was forced to abandon the effort. |
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | History | Laidacker M. "Ladd" Seaberg, an Atchison economic development promoter, and his wife Karen made contact with McGuire in the early 1990s. They eventually purchased the airplane from her and it was transported to Atchison in August 2016. The following year, the museum announced plans for what would eventually become a 17,000 sq ft (1,600 m) hangar. |
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | History | The building first opened to the public on 1 February 2023, before being officially dedicated 14 April. The museum hired Mindi Love Pendergraft as a new executive director three months later. In the meantime, the foundation had funded the creation and placement of a bronze statue of Amelia Earhart in the National Statuary Hall Collection. |
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | Exhibits | The museum features 14 interactive exhibits, include a virtual reality experience. A bronze statue of Amelia Earhart is on display outside the museum. |
Amelia Earhart Hangar Museum | 75,691,335 | Events | An annual Amelia Earhart festival is held at the airport. |
Bill Gunther | 75,691,356 | William John Gunther (7 November 1931 — 15 June 2009) was an Australian rugby union international. |
|
Bill Gunther | 75,691,356 | A native of Bathurst, Gunther attended St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill and Wagga Wagga Agricultural College. |
|
Bill Gunther | 75,691,356 | Gunther was a strong tackling flanker and played his rugby in country New South Wales, much of it with Molong. He gained a Wallabies call up in 1957 for a home series against the All Blacks. After Chilla Wilson was preferred for the 1st Test, selectors made four changes up front for the 2nd Test in Brisbane, with Gunther earning his solitary Wallabies cap. He made 15 uncapped appearances on the 1957–58 tour of Britain, Ireland and France. |
|
Nova Sloboda, Sumy Oblast | 75,691,364 | Nova Sloboda (Ukrainian: Нова Слобода; Russian: Новая Слобода, romanized: Novaya Sloboda) is a village in Ukraine, in Konotop Raion within the country's northern Sumy Oblast. It is the administrative centre of Nova Sloboda rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Its population is 1,568 (as of 2023). |
|
Nova Sloboda, Sumy Oblast | 75,691,364 | History | Nova Sloboda was founded in 1593. In 1630 the Sophrony Monastery [uk] was founded in the village. In the present day, it is a men's monastery of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate), and it was selected in 2007 as one of the three Wonders of Ukraine from Sumy Oblast. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.