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75,552,243 |
Aubrey Lesaso
|
Aubrey Lesaso is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Education and Skills Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Aubrey Lesaso is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Education and Skills Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Aubrey Lesaso is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Education and Skills Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:05:20Z
|
2023-12-28T03:49:45Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
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"Template:Authority control",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:S-aft"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aubrey_Lesaso
|
75,552,246 |
Bright Vanya Moyo
|
Bright Vanya Moyo is a Zimbabwean politician who served as the Member of Parliament for Lupane East between September and October 2023 as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change.
In early-October 2023, Moyo was one of fifteen CCC MPs who were recalled by self-proclaimed CCC secretary-general Sengezo Tshabangu. He then registered to contest the by-election in his constituency in December 2023. He was later barred from contesting the by-election by the Harare High Court which saw Phathisiwe Machangu of the ZANU–PF win the seat.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bright Vanya Moyo is a Zimbabwean politician who served as the Member of Parliament for Lupane East between September and October 2023 as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In early-October 2023, Moyo was one of fifteen CCC MPs who were recalled by self-proclaimed CCC secretary-general Sengezo Tshabangu. He then registered to contest the by-election in his constituency in December 2023. He was later barred from contesting the by-election by the Harare High Court which saw Phathisiwe Machangu of the ZANU–PF win the seat.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Bright Vanya Moyo is a Zimbabwean politician who served as the Member of Parliament for Lupane East between September and October 2023 as a member of the Citizens Coalition for Change. In early-October 2023, Moyo was one of fifteen CCC MPs who were recalled by self-proclaimed CCC secretary-general Sengezo Tshabangu. He then registered to contest the by-election in his constituency in December 2023. He was later barred from contesting the by-election by the Harare High Court which saw Phathisiwe Machangu of the ZANU–PF win the seat.
|
2023-12-13T09:06:02Z
|
2023-12-13T09:09:24Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bright_Vanya_Moyo
|
75,552,252 |
Sethomo Lelatisitswe
|
Sethomo Lelatisitswe is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sethomo Lelatisitswe is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Sethomo Lelatisitswe is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Deputy Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:06:49Z
|
2023-12-21T00:33:11Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sethomo_Lelatisitswe
|
75,552,256 |
Alena Shirmanova
|
[] |
REDIRECT [[Aiko
|
2023-12-13T09:07:12Z
|
2023-12-13T09:07:12Z
|
[
"Template:R cat shell"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alena_Shirmanova
|
|
75,552,261 |
2023–24 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team
|
The 2023–24 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team represents the University of North Texas during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by first-year head coach Jason Burton, play their home games at the UNT Coliseum in Denton, Texas as first year members of the American Athletic Conference.
The Mean Green finished the 2022–23 season 11–20, 8–12 in C-USA play to finish in seventh place. As the #7 seed in the C-USA tournament, they were upset by #10 seed UAB in the first round. This was the Mean Green's final season as members of Conference USA, as they moved to the American Athletic Conference effective July 1, 2023.
On March 20, 2023, it was announced that head coach Jalie Mitchell would be leaving the program after eight seasons at the helm. A week later, on March 27, the school hired Texas A&M–Commerce head coach Jason Burton as the Mean Green's new head coach.
Sources:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2023–24 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team represents the University of North Texas during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by first-year head coach Jason Burton, play their home games at the UNT Coliseum in Denton, Texas as first year members of the American Athletic Conference.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Mean Green finished the 2022–23 season 11–20, 8–12 in C-USA play to finish in seventh place. As the #7 seed in the C-USA tournament, they were upset by #10 seed UAB in the first round. This was the Mean Green's final season as members of Conference USA, as they moved to the American Athletic Conference effective July 1, 2023.",
"title": "Previous season"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On March 20, 2023, it was announced that head coach Jalie Mitchell would be leaving the program after eight seasons at the helm. A week later, on March 27, the school hired Texas A&M–Commerce head coach Jason Burton as the Mean Green's new head coach.",
"title": "Previous season"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Sources:",
"title": "Schedule and results"
}
] |
The 2023–24 North Texas Mean Green women's basketball team represents the University of North Texas during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Mean Green, led by first-year head coach Jason Burton, play their home games at the UNT Coliseum in Denton, Texas as first year members of the American Athletic Conference.
|
2023-12-13T09:07:53Z
|
2023-12-18T01:29:25Z
|
[
"Template:CBB roster/Footer",
"Template:CBB Schedule Entry",
"Template:CBB Schedule End",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:2023–24 American Athletic Conference women's basketball standings",
"Template:CBB roster/Header",
"Template:CBB roster/Player",
"Template:CBB schedule start",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:North Texas Mean Green women's basketball navbox",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox NCAA team season"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324_North_Texas_Mean_Green_women%27s_basketball_team
|
75,552,264 |
Eric Mothibi Molale
|
Eric Mothibi Molale is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Transport and Communications in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Eric Mothibi Molale is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Transport and Communications in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Eric Mothibi Molale is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Transport and Communications in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:08:40Z
|
2023-12-19T08:17:24Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
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"Template:S-end",
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"Template:S-start",
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"Template:S-bef"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Mothibi_Molale
|
75,552,269 |
Kefentse Mzwinila
|
Kefentse Mzwinila is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Lands and Water Affairs in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kefentse Mzwinila is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Lands and Water Affairs in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Kefentse Mzwinila is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Lands and Water Affairs in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:10:04Z
|
2023-12-19T08:15:55Z
|
[
"Template:S-end",
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"Template:Reflist",
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"Template:S-ach"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kefentse_Mzwinila
|
75,552,273 |
The Mask of Marius Melville
|
The Mask of Marius Melville is a 1946 Australian radio serial by Morris West.
This series, along with The Affairs of Harlequin, were among the most successful West ever wrote.
The Melbourne Advocate said the show "is packed with incident; some of the stock devices of thrillers are used, but they are handled with a freshness that prevents them from seeming too familiar. The writing is remarkably good; to one not accustomed to good and careful writing in radio scripts, particularly serials, this is a pleasant surprise. The impression gained from it is that considerable time and thought went to its writing; it has paid dividends, for actors with something worth saying will do a far better job than those entrusted with the same old cliches."
The Argus said it would "test the credulity of a seven-year-old who was beginning to doubt the authenticity of Father Christmas. Of all the fantastic nonsense ever radioed. Marius Melville takes the bun. This sinister figure looming up every Sunday night gives us none of the fearful emotions expected, but just a feeling of complete boredom."
The series was repeated again in 1956.
A journalist investigates the person behind a black market in food.
The serial led to a sequel, On the Danube, which appeared in 1948 and featured many of the same cast.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Mask of Marius Melville is a 1946 Australian radio serial by Morris West.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This series, along with The Affairs of Harlequin, were among the most successful West ever wrote.",
"title": "Detils"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Melbourne Advocate said the show \"is packed with incident; some of the stock devices of thrillers are used, but they are handled with a freshness that prevents them from seeming too familiar. The writing is remarkably good; to one not accustomed to good and careful writing in radio scripts, particularly serials, this is a pleasant surprise. The impression gained from it is that considerable time and thought went to its writing; it has paid dividends, for actors with something worth saying will do a far better job than those entrusted with the same old cliches.\"",
"title": "Detils"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Argus said it would \"test the credulity of a seven-year-old who was beginning to doubt the authenticity of Father Christmas. Of all the fantastic nonsense ever radioed. Marius Melville takes the bun. This sinister figure looming up every Sunday night gives us none of the fearful emotions expected, but just a feeling of complete boredom.\"",
"title": "Detils"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The series was repeated again in 1956.",
"title": "Detils"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "A journalist investigates the person behind a black market in food.",
"title": "Premise"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The serial led to a sequel, On the Danube, which appeared in 1948 and featured many of the same cast.",
"title": "On the Danube"
}
] |
The Mask of Marius Melville is a 1946 Australian radio serial by Morris West.
|
2023-12-13T09:10:59Z
|
2023-12-17T13:38:45Z
|
[
"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Citation"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mask_of_Marius_Melville
|
75,552,277 |
Margaret Irene Lang
|
Margaret Irene Lang (23 May 1893 – 14 February 1983) was an Australian nurse who became the Australian air force matron-in-chief at the Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service.
Lang was born in 1893 in the state of Victoria as her parents had been. They were Annie (born Martin) and John Douglas Lang who was a miner.
By the time she had trained as a nurse, Australia was involved in World War One. By 1917 she had become a matron but she left the hospital in Stawell to join the Australian Army Nursing Service, Australian Imperial Force briefly in Suez before she joined 300 of her peers on Salonika. In 1919 she was in London where she had four months studying domestic science at the South-Western Polytechnic. She left the military at the beginning of 1920 with the rank of sister.
She was a matron at hospitals in Melbourne including the Talbot Epileptics Colony before she returned to Stawell Hospital in 1924. She served there until 1938 when she joined the Victoria Police Hospital as matron.
The Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service was founded in July 1940 at the suggestion of Air Vice-Marshal Victor Hurley, the Director-General of Medical Services based on the UK's Princess Mary's Royal Air Force Nursing Service as part of the RAAF. Lang was appointed its first Matron-in-Chief with Muriel Knox Doherty as a matron. By December 1940 the service had 45 members, but this increased to over six hundred by December 1945. All members held commissioned rank, and wore RAAF badges of rank along with the RAAF medical badge on their tunic lapels and capes, but did not use Air Force rank titles.
At the end of the war in 1946 she returned to Victoria Police Hospital.
Lang received an OBE in 1950. She died in Canterbury, Melbourne.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Margaret Irene Lang (23 May 1893 – 14 February 1983) was an Australian nurse who became the Australian air force matron-in-chief at the Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Lang was born in 1893 in the state of Victoria as her parents had been. They were Annie (born Martin) and John Douglas Lang who was a miner.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "By the time she had trained as a nurse, Australia was involved in World War One. By 1917 she had become a matron but she left the hospital in Stawell to join the Australian Army Nursing Service, Australian Imperial Force briefly in Suez before she joined 300 of her peers on Salonika. In 1919 she was in London where she had four months studying domestic science at the South-Western Polytechnic. She left the military at the beginning of 1920 with the rank of sister.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She was a matron at hospitals in Melbourne including the Talbot Epileptics Colony before she returned to Stawell Hospital in 1924. She served there until 1938 when she joined the Victoria Police Hospital as matron.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service was founded in July 1940 at the suggestion of Air Vice-Marshal Victor Hurley, the Director-General of Medical Services based on the UK's Princess Mary's Royal Air Force Nursing Service as part of the RAAF. Lang was appointed its first Matron-in-Chief with Muriel Knox Doherty as a matron. By December 1940 the service had 45 members, but this increased to over six hundred by December 1945. All members held commissioned rank, and wore RAAF badges of rank along with the RAAF medical badge on their tunic lapels and capes, but did not use Air Force rank titles.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "At the end of the war in 1946 she returned to Victoria Police Hospital.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Lang received an OBE in 1950. She died in Canterbury, Melbourne.",
"title": "Life"
}
] |
Margaret Irene Lang was an Australian nurse who became the Australian air force matron-in-chief at the Royal Australian Air Force Nursing Service.
|
2023-12-13T09:11:18Z
|
2023-12-16T16:37:27Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Irene_Lang
|
75,552,297 |
Fidelis Macdonald Molao
|
Fidelis Macdonald Molao is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Fidelis Macdonald Molao is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Fidelis Macdonald Molao is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:16:06Z
|
2023-12-28T03:49:33Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fidelis_Macdonald_Molao
|
75,552,298 |
Cult house
|
%5B%5BWikipedia%3ARedirects+for+discussion%5D%5D+debate+closed+as+delete
#REDIRECT Temple
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "%5B%5BWikipedia%3ARedirects+for+discussion%5D%5D+debate+closed+as+delete",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "#REDIRECT Temple",
"title": ""
}
] |
%5B%5BWikipedia%3ARedirects+for+discussion%5D%5D+debate+closed+as+delete #REDIRECT Temple
|
2023-12-13T09:16:25Z
|
2023-12-26T07:29:41Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult_house
|
75,552,325 |
Meretrix lamarckii
|
Meretrix lamarckii, also called Korean clam or Korean hard clam, is a species of saltwater bivalve in the family Veneridae. It is the second species of venerid clam where doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI) has been identified.
It is a medium-sized clam which lives in sandy sediments from the subtidal zone to a depth of 20 meters. In the waters off Hyūga, Miyazaki, it spawns between late July and early September.
M. lamarckii is edible and economically important in China; commercial fishing has greatly disrupted the habitat where it lives. It is a filter feeder which primarily feeds on phytoplankton. Its shell is used to make the white stones used in Go.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Meretrix lamarckii, also called Korean clam or Korean hard clam, is a species of saltwater bivalve in the family Veneridae. It is the second species of venerid clam where doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI) has been identified.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It is a medium-sized clam which lives in sandy sediments from the subtidal zone to a depth of 20 meters. In the waters off Hyūga, Miyazaki, it spawns between late July and early September.",
"title": "Ecology"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "M. lamarckii is edible and economically important in China; commercial fishing has greatly disrupted the habitat where it lives. It is a filter feeder which primarily feeds on phytoplankton. Its shell is used to make the white stones used in Go.",
"title": "Ecology"
}
] |
Meretrix lamarckii, also called Korean clam or Korean hard clam, is a species of saltwater bivalve in the family Veneridae. It is the second species of venerid clam where doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI) has been identified.
|
2023-12-13T09:20:18Z
|
2023-12-30T03:32:31Z
|
[
"Template:Sfn",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Veneridae-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Speciesbox"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meretrix_lamarckii
|
75,552,327 |
Lisa Orloff Clark
|
Lisa Orloff Clark is a New Zealand mathematician, and as of 2023 is a full professor at Victoria University of Wellington and Head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics. She works in the field of algebra, and also on inquiry-based learning in mathematics education.
Clark completed a PhD titled Classifying the Type of Groupoid C*-algebras at Dartmouth College in 2004. Clark then joined the faculty of the Victoria University of Wellington, rising to full professor in 2023. She has published on C*-algebras, groupoids, Steingberg algebras and Leavitt path algebras.
Clark is the Head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics at Victoria University of Wellington. She is on the editorial board of the Journal of Inquiry-Based Learning in Mathematics.
In 2018 Clark was an associate investigator on a Marsden grant led by Astrid an Huef and Iain Raeburn, titled Through the looking glass: sharpening the classification program through implications for operator algebras of graphs and groupoids. In 2021 Clark and van Huef were joint principal investigators on another successful Marsden grant, called Establishing a structure theory for C*-algebras of non-Hausdorff groupoids.
In 2017 Clark was awarded the New Zealand Mathematical Society's top prize, the Kalman Prize for best paper. She was a plenary speaker at the NZMS colloquium in 2019.
In 2022 Clark was awarded the Aitken Lectureship, a joint award between the New Zealand and London Mathematical Societies. Clark gave lectures at Queen's University Belfast, Durham University, Aberystwyth University and at the London Mathematical Society annual meeting.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Lisa Orloff Clark is a New Zealand mathematician, and as of 2023 is a full professor at Victoria University of Wellington and Head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics. She works in the field of algebra, and also on inquiry-based learning in mathematics education.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Clark completed a PhD titled Classifying the Type of Groupoid C*-algebras at Dartmouth College in 2004. Clark then joined the faculty of the Victoria University of Wellington, rising to full professor in 2023. She has published on C*-algebras, groupoids, Steingberg algebras and Leavitt path algebras.",
"title": "Academic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Clark is the Head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics at Victoria University of Wellington. She is on the editorial board of the Journal of Inquiry-Based Learning in Mathematics.",
"title": "Academic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2018 Clark was an associate investigator on a Marsden grant led by Astrid an Huef and Iain Raeburn, titled Through the looking glass: sharpening the classification program through implications for operator algebras of graphs and groupoids. In 2021 Clark and van Huef were joint principal investigators on another successful Marsden grant, called Establishing a structure theory for C*-algebras of non-Hausdorff groupoids.",
"title": "Academic career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2017 Clark was awarded the New Zealand Mathematical Society's top prize, the Kalman Prize for best paper. She was a plenary speaker at the NZMS colloquium in 2019.",
"title": "Honours and awards"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2022 Clark was awarded the Aitken Lectureship, a joint award between the New Zealand and London Mathematical Societies. Clark gave lectures at Queen's University Belfast, Durham University, Aberystwyth University and at the London Mathematical Society annual meeting.",
"title": "Honours and awards"
}
] |
Lisa Orloff Clark is a New Zealand mathematician, and as of 2023 is a full professor at Victoria University of Wellington and Head of the School of Mathematics and Statistics. She works in the field of algebra, and also on inquiry-based learning in mathematics education.
|
2023-12-13T09:20:25Z
|
2023-12-13T21:34:58Z
|
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"Template:CiteQ"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisa_Orloff_Clark
|
75,552,338 |
Kevin Moses Poetiray
|
Kevin Moses Eliazer Poetiray (born 14 January 1998), is an Indonesian professional basketball player. He currently plays for the Kesatria Bengawan Solo club of the Indonesian Basketball League (IBL).
He has represented the Indonesia men's national 3x3 team at several occasions, such as the 2017 FIBA 3x3 World Cup in France. And also in the 2023 SEA Games in Cambodia.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kevin Moses Eliazer Poetiray (born 14 January 1998), is an Indonesian professional basketball player. He currently plays for the Kesatria Bengawan Solo club of the Indonesian Basketball League (IBL).",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He has represented the Indonesia men's national 3x3 team at several occasions, such as the 2017 FIBA 3x3 World Cup in France. And also in the 2023 SEA Games in Cambodia.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Kevin Moses Eliazer Poetiray, is an Indonesian professional basketball player. He currently plays for the Kesatria Bengawan Solo club of the Indonesian Basketball League (IBL). He has represented the Indonesia men's national 3x3 team at several occasions, such as the 2017 FIBA 3x3 World Cup in France. And also in the 2023 SEA Games in Cambodia.
|
2023-12-13T09:22:49Z
|
2023-12-15T00:12:36Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox basketball biography"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Moses_Poetiray
|
75,552,341 |
Mehmet Vahit Saçaklıoğlu
|
Mehmet Vahit Saçaklıoğlu (January 8, 1982, Istanbul, Turkey) is a Turkish-Ukrainian entrepreneur. He is the Founder & Chairman of the Board of the Bosphorus Development.
He was born on January 8, 1982, in Istanbul, Turkey in a family engaged in commercial activities. In 2001, Saçaklıoğlu moved to Kyiv where he studied at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv during 2002–2008, obtaining a bachelor's and then a master's degree in international relations.
Mehmet Saçaklıoğlu is a third generation representative of the Saçaklıoğlu family. He started his career in the family business in Istanbul.
In 2017–2019, he was a member of the Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey (DEIK). Since 2019, a board member at the International Turkish Ukrainian Businessmen Association (TUID).
Since 2021, a member of the congress of the Fenerbahçe football club and the 1907 Fenerbahçe association.
In 2019, he founded the investment and development company Bosphorus Development in Ukraine which specialization is the construction of residential complexes, offices, business centers, hotels, and shopping centers.
In October 2022, Bosphorus Development led by Saçaklıoğlu was part of the delegation representing Ukraine at the Real Estate Fair and Conference in Munich.
The first project of the company Bosphorus Development in Ukraine was the business-class residential complex Maxima Residence, which is being built in partnership with the Real Estate Corporation RIEL.
Saçaklıoğlu is married and has two daughters.
Since 2022, Bosphorus Development has been supporting the Ukrainian military purchasing and donating cars, helmets, body armor, thermal imaging cameras, and medical supplies during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Saçaklıoğlu has organized rehabilitation programs for Ukrainian children at the İstanbul Aquarium in Turkey. Also, more than 150 Ukrainians received shelter and support at the Crowne Plaza Istanbul Florya hotel, which was built and is owned by a group of family companies affiliated to the Saçaklıoğlu family.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mehmet Vahit Saçaklıoğlu (January 8, 1982, Istanbul, Turkey) is a Turkish-Ukrainian entrepreneur. He is the Founder & Chairman of the Board of the Bosphorus Development.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "He was born on January 8, 1982, in Istanbul, Turkey in a family engaged in commercial activities. In 2001, Saçaklıoğlu moved to Kyiv where he studied at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv during 2002–2008, obtaining a bachelor's and then a master's degree in international relations.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Mehmet Saçaklıoğlu is a third generation representative of the Saçaklıoğlu family. He started his career in the family business in Istanbul.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2017–2019, he was a member of the Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey (DEIK). Since 2019, a board member at the International Turkish Ukrainian Businessmen Association (TUID).",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Since 2021, a member of the congress of the Fenerbahçe football club and the 1907 Fenerbahçe association.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2019, he founded the investment and development company Bosphorus Development in Ukraine which specialization is the construction of residential complexes, offices, business centers, hotels, and shopping centers.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In October 2022, Bosphorus Development led by Saçaklıoğlu was part of the delegation representing Ukraine at the Real Estate Fair and Conference in Munich.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The first project of the company Bosphorus Development in Ukraine was the business-class residential complex Maxima Residence, which is being built in partnership with the Real Estate Corporation RIEL.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Saçaklıoğlu is married and has two daughters.",
"title": "Private life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Since 2022, Bosphorus Development has been supporting the Ukrainian military purchasing and donating cars, helmets, body armor, thermal imaging cameras, and medical supplies during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Saçaklıoğlu has organized rehabilitation programs for Ukrainian children at the İstanbul Aquarium in Turkey. Also, more than 150 Ukrainians received shelter and support at the Crowne Plaza Istanbul Florya hotel, which was built and is owned by a group of family companies affiliated to the Saçaklıoğlu family.",
"title": "Philanthropy"
}
] |
Mehmet Vahit Saçaklıoğlu is a Turkish-Ukrainian entrepreneur. He is the Founder & Chairman of the Board of the Bosphorus Development.
|
2023-12-13T09:23:10Z
|
2023-12-29T20:26:21Z
|
[
"Template:Improve categories",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehmet_Vahit_Sa%C3%A7akl%C4%B1o%C4%9Flu
|
75,552,381 |
Edwin Gorataone Dikoloti
|
Edwin Gorataone Dikoloti is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Edwin Gorataone Dikoloti is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Edwin Gorataone Dikoloti is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:27:20Z
|
2023-12-19T08:11:23Z
|
[
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Botswana-politician-stub",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Gorataone_Dikoloti
|
75,552,385 |
Blue Labyrinth (New South Wales)
|
The Blue Labyrinth is an area covering much of the southern part of Blue Mountains National Park in New South Wales, Australia. It spans an area south of the Great Western Highway from Wentworth Falls to Glenbrook, stretching from Kings Tableland in the west to Warragamba Dam and the Nepean River in the east, and the Burragorang Valley to the south.
Below are some geographical features of the Blue Labyrinth.
Creeks and rivers:
Caves and rocks:
Tracks:
The Blue Labyrinth contains many prehistoric Aboriginal rock art sites, many of which are charcoal engravings in rock shelters that depict animals such as swamp wallabies, eastern long-necked turtles, bush rats, and other animals. The best-known Aboriginal rock art site in the Blue Labyrinth is Red Hands Cave.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Blue Labyrinth is an area covering much of the southern part of Blue Mountains National Park in New South Wales, Australia. It spans an area south of the Great Western Highway from Wentworth Falls to Glenbrook, stretching from Kings Tableland in the west to Warragamba Dam and the Nepean River in the east, and the Burragorang Valley to the south.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Below are some geographical features of the Blue Labyrinth.",
"title": "Geographical features"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Creeks and rivers:",
"title": "Geographical features"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Caves and rocks:",
"title": "Geographical features"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Tracks:",
"title": "Geographical features"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The Blue Labyrinth contains many prehistoric Aboriginal rock art sites, many of which are charcoal engravings in rock shelters that depict animals such as swamp wallabies, eastern long-necked turtles, bush rats, and other animals. The best-known Aboriginal rock art site in the Blue Labyrinth is Red Hands Cave.",
"title": "Rock art sites"
}
] |
The Blue Labyrinth is an area covering much of the southern part of Blue Mountains National Park in New South Wales, Australia. It spans an area south of the Great Western Highway from Wentworth Falls to Glenbrook, stretching from Kings Tableland in the west to Warragamba Dam and the Nepean River in the east, and the Burragorang Valley to the south.
|
2023-12-13T09:28:44Z
|
2023-12-13T10:07:44Z
|
[
"Template:For",
"Template:Blue Mountains topics",
"Template:New South Wales mountains",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Stack",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox mountain"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Labyrinth_(New_South_Wales)
|
75,552,386 |
Thulagano Merafe Segokgo
|
Thulagano Merafe Segokgo is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Communications, Knowledge and Technology in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Thulagano Merafe Segokgo is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Communications, Knowledge and Technology in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Thulagano Merafe Segokgo is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Communications, Knowledge and Technology in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:28:45Z
|
2023-12-20T07:56:28Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Botswana-politician-stub",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thulagano_Merafe_Segokgo
|
75,552,391 |
Arturo M. Taca
|
Arturo Montemayor Taca (February 11, 1954 - February 11, 1997) was a Missouri-based Filipino surgeon, urologist, writer, and activist best known as one of the leaders of the Movement for a Free Philippines (MFP), a US-based organization established by exiled Filipinos in opposition to the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines. He is honored as a hero of the fight for Philippine democracy, having his name inscribed on the Wall of Remembrance of the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani memorial in 2011
Already a doctor at the Ospital ng Maynila in the Philippines, Taca was forced to flee to the United States due to political persecution after Marcos' declaration of Martial Law in 1972, Taca immigrated to the US and was granted asylum there in 1977. He passed both the Missouri and Illinois medical licensure examinations and opened a practice in both states and took up posts at the Homer G. Phillips Hospital in St. Louis, eventually joining its general surgery department and then in the urology departments.
From there, he became the head of the St. Louis chapter of the Movement for a Free Philippines, which had been established by Raul Manglapus and Bonifacio Gillego in Washington, D.C. four years prior. Working with other MFP stalwarts such as Manglapus, Gillego, Heherson Alvarez, Serge Osmena, Raul Daza, and Steve Psinakis, Taca recruited like-minded Filipino expatriates, published a newsletter critical of the Marcos regime, and lobbied US Senators to call attention to the Marcos administration's human rights record.
When Bonifacio Gillego asked Taca for help in confirming that Marcos had falsified his war records in order to falsely claim to be a World War II hero, Taca worked hard to help track down the necessary documents, resulting in a New York Times exposé on Marcos' fake war record, published in early 1986.
During the last years of the Marcos administration in the Philippines, Taca became a regular fixture on US television, as an established voice of exiles opposed to the dictatorship. He also wrote for Life magazine, Washington Post, St. Louis Post Dispatch, the US-based Filipino Reporter, and Philippine News.
Taca developed lung problems linked to smoking, and died at home in St. Louis home on February 11, 1997, his 52nd birthday. In the Philippines, he is honored as a hero of the fight for the restoration of democracy, and his name was inscribed on the Wall of Remembrance of the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani memorial in 2011.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Arturo Montemayor Taca (February 11, 1954 - February 11, 1997) was a Missouri-based Filipino surgeon, urologist, writer, and activist best known as one of the leaders of the Movement for a Free Philippines (MFP), a US-based organization established by exiled Filipinos in opposition to the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines. He is honored as a hero of the fight for Philippine democracy, having his name inscribed on the Wall of Remembrance of the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani memorial in 2011",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Already a doctor at the Ospital ng Maynila in the Philippines, Taca was forced to flee to the United States due to political persecution after Marcos' declaration of Martial Law in 1972, Taca immigrated to the US and was granted asylum there in 1977. He passed both the Missouri and Illinois medical licensure examinations and opened a practice in both states and took up posts at the Homer G. Phillips Hospital in St. Louis, eventually joining its general surgery department and then in the urology departments.",
"title": "Life in the Philippines and exile"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "From there, he became the head of the St. Louis chapter of the Movement for a Free Philippines, which had been established by Raul Manglapus and Bonifacio Gillego in Washington, D.C. four years prior. Working with other MFP stalwarts such as Manglapus, Gillego, Heherson Alvarez, Serge Osmena, Raul Daza, and Steve Psinakis, Taca recruited like-minded Filipino expatriates, published a newsletter critical of the Marcos regime, and lobbied US Senators to call attention to the Marcos administration's human rights record.",
"title": "Movement for a Free Philippines"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "When Bonifacio Gillego asked Taca for help in confirming that Marcos had falsified his war records in order to falsely claim to be a World War II hero, Taca worked hard to help track down the necessary documents, resulting in a New York Times exposé on Marcos' fake war record, published in early 1986.",
"title": "Role in the Marcos Medals expose"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "During the last years of the Marcos administration in the Philippines, Taca became a regular fixture on US television, as an established voice of exiles opposed to the dictatorship. He also wrote for Life magazine, Washington Post, St. Louis Post Dispatch, the US-based Filipino Reporter, and Philippine News.",
"title": "Later years"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Taca developed lung problems linked to smoking, and died at home in St. Louis home on February 11, 1997, his 52nd birthday. In the Philippines, he is honored as a hero of the fight for the restoration of democracy, and his name was inscribed on the Wall of Remembrance of the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani memorial in 2011.",
"title": "Death and legacy"
}
] |
Arturo Montemayor Taca was a Missouri-based Filipino surgeon, urologist, writer, and activist best known as one of the leaders of the Movement for a Free Philippines (MFP), a US-based organization established by exiled Filipinos in opposition to the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines. He is honored as a hero of the fight for Philippine democracy, having his name inscribed on the Wall of Remembrance of the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani memorial in 2011
|
2023-12-13T09:30:04Z
|
2023-12-18T12:10:33Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Infobox person"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arturo_M._Taca
|
75,552,400 |
Karabo Socraat Gare
|
Karabo Socraat Gare is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Entrepreneurship in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Karabo Socraat Gare is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Entrepreneurship in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Karabo Socraat Gare is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Entrepreneurship in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:30:44Z
|
2023-12-20T04:02:59Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:Botswana-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karabo_Socraat_Gare
|
75,552,402 |
Blue Labyrinth
|
Blue Labyrinth is a thriller novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. The book was released on November 11, 2014, by Grand Central Publishing. This is the fourteenth book in the Special Agent Pendergast series.
Badged by the FBI but given free rein, wealthy as a wizard Wall Street trader, intelligent enough to make Mensa members feel inferior, master of exotic Chongg Ran meditation, Pendergast, “skin as pale as marble, eyes like silver conchas,” shoulders his custom 1911 Les Baer Thunder Ranch Special .45 and sets out to find the killer who deposited his estranged son, Alban, dead on his Manhattan mansion’s doorstep. Alban is autopsied, and an exotic turquoise is found in his stomach. At the American Museum of Natural History, Pendergast consults an expert gemologist—worth reading if buying turquoise—and heads for California’s Salton Sea in search of the Golden Spider Mine, all while giving only passing notice to a museum murder under investigation by his friend Lt. Vincent D'Agosta. So begins Pendergast’s deconstruction of a deadly conspiracy originating with patent medicine and ending with bizarre battles—triflic acid, poison darts and Sumatran buckthorn as weapons—at the museum and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. A Pendergast ancestor, Hezekiah, built the family’s fortune on an elixir that ultimately left users with ALS- or Huntington's disease–like symptoms. Now the villain is spurred by epigenetic changes wrought on users’ descendants by “Hezekiah’s Compound Elixir and Glandular Restorative.” Pendergast visits exotic climes for clues, and the authors offer sparkling descriptions—the Salton Fontainebleau is a “fantastical cross between a Chinese temple and an Asbury Park amusement parlor.” Constance Greene and other familiar characters appear, and Pendergast learns a startling truth about Alban, whose warped psyche had once wrought havoc. Great character-driven crime fiction—readers new to the series won’t be entirely lost, and Pendergast patrons will be thoroughly satisfied.
—Review by Kirkus Reviews
Blue Labyrinth currently holds a 4.1/5 rating on Goodreads.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Blue Labyrinth is a thriller novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. The book was released on November 11, 2014, by Grand Central Publishing. This is the fourteenth book in the Special Agent Pendergast series.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Badged by the FBI but given free rein, wealthy as a wizard Wall Street trader, intelligent enough to make Mensa members feel inferior, master of exotic Chongg Ran meditation, Pendergast, “skin as pale as marble, eyes like silver conchas,” shoulders his custom 1911 Les Baer Thunder Ranch Special .45 and sets out to find the killer who deposited his estranged son, Alban, dead on his Manhattan mansion’s doorstep. Alban is autopsied, and an exotic turquoise is found in his stomach. At the American Museum of Natural History, Pendergast consults an expert gemologist—worth reading if buying turquoise—and heads for California’s Salton Sea in search of the Golden Spider Mine, all while giving only passing notice to a museum murder under investigation by his friend Lt. Vincent D'Agosta. So begins Pendergast’s deconstruction of a deadly conspiracy originating with patent medicine and ending with bizarre battles—triflic acid, poison darts and Sumatran buckthorn as weapons—at the museum and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. A Pendergast ancestor, Hezekiah, built the family’s fortune on an elixir that ultimately left users with ALS- or Huntington's disease–like symptoms. Now the villain is spurred by epigenetic changes wrought on users’ descendants by “Hezekiah’s Compound Elixir and Glandular Restorative.” Pendergast visits exotic climes for clues, and the authors offer sparkling descriptions—the Salton Fontainebleau is a “fantastical cross between a Chinese temple and an Asbury Park amusement parlor.” Constance Greene and other familiar characters appear, and Pendergast learns a startling truth about Alban, whose warped psyche had once wrought havoc. Great character-driven crime fiction—readers new to the series won’t be entirely lost, and Pendergast patrons will be thoroughly satisfied.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "—Review by Kirkus Reviews",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Blue Labyrinth currently holds a 4.1/5 rating on Goodreads.",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Blue Labyrinth is a thriller novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. The book was released on November 11, 2014, by Grand Central Publishing. This is the fourteenth book in the Special Agent Pendergast series.
|
2023-12-13T09:31:20Z
|
2023-12-13T09:32:55Z
|
[
"Template:Quote",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:YouTube",
"Template:Preston/Child",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Labyrinth
|
75,552,409 |
2006 Northwestern State Demons football team
|
The 2006 Northwestern State Demons football team represented Northwestern State University as a member of the Southland Conference during the 2006 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Led by fifth-year head coach Scott Stoker, the Demons compiled an overall record of 4–7 with a mark of 2–4 in conference play, tying for fifth place in the Southland. Northwestern State played home games at Harry Turpin Stadium in Natchitoches, Louisiana.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2006 Northwestern State Demons football team represented Northwestern State University as a member of the Southland Conference during the 2006 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Led by fifth-year head coach Scott Stoker, the Demons compiled an overall record of 4–7 with a mark of 2–4 in conference play, tying for fifth place in the Southland. Northwestern State played home games at Harry Turpin Stadium in Natchitoches, Louisiana.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Schedule"
}
] |
The 2006 Northwestern State Demons football team represented Northwestern State University as a member of the Southland Conference during the 2006 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Led by fifth-year head coach Scott Stoker, the Demons compiled an overall record of 4–7 with a mark of 2–4 in conference play, tying for fifth place in the Southland. Northwestern State played home games at Harry Turpin Stadium in Natchitoches, Louisiana.
|
2023-12-13T09:32:05Z
|
2023-12-21T05:20:24Z
|
[
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox college sports team season",
"Template:2006 Southland Conference football standings",
"Template:CFB schedule",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Northwestern State Demons football navbox",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Northwestern_State_Demons_football_team
|
75,552,412 |
Lefoko Maxwell Moagi
|
Lefoko Maxwell Moagi is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Minerals and Energy in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Lefoko Maxwell Moagi is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Minerals and Energy in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Lefoko Maxwell Moagi is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Minerals and Energy in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:32:19Z
|
2023-12-19T08:08:35Z
|
[
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Botswana-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lefoko_Maxwell_Moagi
|
75,552,413 |
Criminalization of sea rescue in the Mediterranean
|
The criminalization of sea rescue in the Mediterranean refers to the increase in policing of individuals and search and rescue (SAR) NGOs aiding migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. It further encompasses the increase in de-legitimisation attempts of SAR NGOs by governments, high-profile politicians and officials.
Between 2014 and 2022, the number of recorded deaths of migrants seeking to cross the Mediterranean to reach European shores is estimated at 25'716 deaths, with the true number of lost lives expected to be higher. Numerous scholars and activists often refer to the Mediterranean Sea as a graveyard for people seeking refuge as well as „the world’s deadliest border“. Over the past years, NGOs operating in large-scale rescue missions in the region have increasingly become targets of de-legitimisation and criminalization attempts by Frontex, European governments, high level politicians and officials, as well as the media.
By the end of 2016, Frontex classified NGO activity in the Mediterranean as a pull factor for migrants and smugglers, with significant implications and challenges for both border control as well as SAR activities. Prominent Italian politicians and officials accused NGOs of colluding with human traffickers, additionally alleging that certain organisations were financed by smugglers. These allegations were strongly denied by activists, and researchers widely highlight a lack of evidence for such claims.
Italy’s far-right politician Matteo Salvini is a further prominent voice in attempting to halt NGO activity in the Mediterranean. He called for the arrest of NGO crews operating in the region and suggested deliberately sinking their vessels in an attempt to stop their SAR activities. In July 2017, following threats to close its ports to NGO vessels, the Italian government introduced a code of conduct aimed at regulating the activities of non-governmental organizations involved in search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean. The implementation of the code was mandatory in order for NGOs to continue their operations in the region. The code of conduct specifies that NGOs are prohibited from entering Libyan waters for migrant operations, that they must accept military and police personnel on board, and that they no longer are allowed to transfer rescued people to other vessels at sea, mandating rescue crews to return to port to disembark.
Representatives from multiple NGOs, including Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet, as well as scholars, condemned the code of conduct for challenging their fundamental principles and infringing on NGOs’ abilities to conduct life-saving operations at sea. MOAS, Save the Children and Proactiva Open Arms were the first to sign the code of conduct, while MSF, Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet, among others, initially refused. Consequently, the Italian government seized and impounded Jugend Rettet’s vessel, accusing the NGO of colluding with Libyan smugglers. Shortly thereafter, Italy and Malta, nonetheless, denied permission to Proactiva’s ship to allow three rescued Libyan migrants to disembark. In addition to criminalization attempts by European governments, acts of hostilities by the Libyan Coast Guard against SAR NGOs further impede their life-saving operations and put the safety of their crews at risk, resulting in numerous NGOs halting their operations and temporarily withdrawing from the Mediterranean.
In early 2023, the Italian government introduced a new set of rules to the code of conduct. The new rules include banning NGO vessels from conducting multiple rescues at sea and requiring them to disclose additional information about their rescue operations.
In June 2022, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) reported that since 2016, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, Malta and the Netherlands had initiated 60 criminal and administrative proceedings against NGOs carrying out search and rescue operations. In addition to the proceedings against crew members and rescue vessels, the FRA reports that since 2018, national authorities have increasingly tried to restrict access to European ports, which resulted in delays in disembarkation, leaving rescued people at sea for more than 24 hours, before being allowed to access a safe port.
Carola Rackete is a German captain and conservation scientist who, in 2019, volunteered with the German NGO Sea-Watch in the Mediterranean sea. In June 2019, their vessel Sea-Watch 3, with 53 rescued people and 22 crew members on board, spent two weeks in international waters, without permission to disembark at the closest Italian port in Lampedusa. The NGO had refused the Libyan Coast Guard’s request to dock at Tripoli, which is considered unsafe by the EU and humanitarian organizations. Following a significant deterioration of the conditions and health of those on board after 16 days at sea, Carola Rackete declared a state of emergency and made the decision to defy the Italian authorities’ refusal, and docked in Lampedusa. Consequently, Rackete was taken into custody and placed under house arrest, and the rescue vessel was impounded. In December 2021, the Italian authorities dropped the last charges against Rackete.
Pia Klemp is a German human rights activist and biologist. From 2016 to 2018 she captained two rescue vessels in the Mediterranean for Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet. After the ship Iuventa was seized by Italian authorities in 2017, Klemp, along with 9 crew members, was accused of cooperating with human traffickers and faced up to 20 years in prison. The charges against her were ultimately dropped, after amassing legal fees of hundreds of thousands of Euros.
Sara Mardini, a former Syrian competitive swimmer and human rights activist, and Seán Binder, a German-Irish human rights activist and rescue diver, were jailed in August 2018 for aiding in the rescue of migrants on the island of Lesbos, Greece. More than four years after the initial arrest, they had their case heard in court along with 22 other volunteers, in what is being coined as the "largest case of criminalization of solidarity in Europe"
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The criminalization of sea rescue in the Mediterranean refers to the increase in policing of individuals and search and rescue (SAR) NGOs aiding migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. It further encompasses the increase in de-legitimisation attempts of SAR NGOs by governments, high-profile politicians and officials.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Between 2014 and 2022, the number of recorded deaths of migrants seeking to cross the Mediterranean to reach European shores is estimated at 25'716 deaths, with the true number of lost lives expected to be higher. Numerous scholars and activists often refer to the Mediterranean Sea as a graveyard for people seeking refuge as well as „the world’s deadliest border“. Over the past years, NGOs operating in large-scale rescue missions in the region have increasingly become targets of de-legitimisation and criminalization attempts by Frontex, European governments, high level politicians and officials, as well as the media.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "By the end of 2016, Frontex classified NGO activity in the Mediterranean as a pull factor for migrants and smugglers, with significant implications and challenges for both border control as well as SAR activities. Prominent Italian politicians and officials accused NGOs of colluding with human traffickers, additionally alleging that certain organisations were financed by smugglers. These allegations were strongly denied by activists, and researchers widely highlight a lack of evidence for such claims.",
"title": "Developments of Criminalization of Sea Rescue"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Italy’s far-right politician Matteo Salvini is a further prominent voice in attempting to halt NGO activity in the Mediterranean. He called for the arrest of NGO crews operating in the region and suggested deliberately sinking their vessels in an attempt to stop their SAR activities. In July 2017, following threats to close its ports to NGO vessels, the Italian government introduced a code of conduct aimed at regulating the activities of non-governmental organizations involved in search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean. The implementation of the code was mandatory in order for NGOs to continue their operations in the region. The code of conduct specifies that NGOs are prohibited from entering Libyan waters for migrant operations, that they must accept military and police personnel on board, and that they no longer are allowed to transfer rescued people to other vessels at sea, mandating rescue crews to return to port to disembark.",
"title": "Developments of Criminalization of Sea Rescue"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Representatives from multiple NGOs, including Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet, as well as scholars, condemned the code of conduct for challenging their fundamental principles and infringing on NGOs’ abilities to conduct life-saving operations at sea. MOAS, Save the Children and Proactiva Open Arms were the first to sign the code of conduct, while MSF, Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet, among others, initially refused. Consequently, the Italian government seized and impounded Jugend Rettet’s vessel, accusing the NGO of colluding with Libyan smugglers. Shortly thereafter, Italy and Malta, nonetheless, denied permission to Proactiva’s ship to allow three rescued Libyan migrants to disembark. In addition to criminalization attempts by European governments, acts of hostilities by the Libyan Coast Guard against SAR NGOs further impede their life-saving operations and put the safety of their crews at risk, resulting in numerous NGOs halting their operations and temporarily withdrawing from the Mediterranean.",
"title": "Developments of Criminalization of Sea Rescue"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In early 2023, the Italian government introduced a new set of rules to the code of conduct. The new rules include banning NGO vessels from conducting multiple rescues at sea and requiring them to disclose additional information about their rescue operations.",
"title": "Developments of Criminalization of Sea Rescue"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In June 2022, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) reported that since 2016, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, Malta and the Netherlands had initiated 60 criminal and administrative proceedings against NGOs carrying out search and rescue operations. In addition to the proceedings against crew members and rescue vessels, the FRA reports that since 2018, national authorities have increasingly tried to restrict access to European ports, which resulted in delays in disembarkation, leaving rescued people at sea for more than 24 hours, before being allowed to access a safe port.",
"title": "Prominent Cases of Criminalizing NGO Personnel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Carola Rackete is a German captain and conservation scientist who, in 2019, volunteered with the German NGO Sea-Watch in the Mediterranean sea. In June 2019, their vessel Sea-Watch 3, with 53 rescued people and 22 crew members on board, spent two weeks in international waters, without permission to disembark at the closest Italian port in Lampedusa. The NGO had refused the Libyan Coast Guard’s request to dock at Tripoli, which is considered unsafe by the EU and humanitarian organizations. Following a significant deterioration of the conditions and health of those on board after 16 days at sea, Carola Rackete declared a state of emergency and made the decision to defy the Italian authorities’ refusal, and docked in Lampedusa. Consequently, Rackete was taken into custody and placed under house arrest, and the rescue vessel was impounded. In December 2021, the Italian authorities dropped the last charges against Rackete.",
"title": "Prominent Cases of Criminalizing NGO Personnel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Pia Klemp is a German human rights activist and biologist. From 2016 to 2018 she captained two rescue vessels in the Mediterranean for Sea-Watch and Jugend Rettet. After the ship Iuventa was seized by Italian authorities in 2017, Klemp, along with 9 crew members, was accused of cooperating with human traffickers and faced up to 20 years in prison. The charges against her were ultimately dropped, after amassing legal fees of hundreds of thousands of Euros.",
"title": "Prominent Cases of Criminalizing NGO Personnel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Sara Mardini, a former Syrian competitive swimmer and human rights activist, and Seán Binder, a German-Irish human rights activist and rescue diver, were jailed in August 2018 for aiding in the rescue of migrants on the island of Lesbos, Greece. More than four years after the initial arrest, they had their case heard in court along with 22 other volunteers, in what is being coined as the \"largest case of criminalization of solidarity in Europe\"",
"title": "Prominent Cases of Criminalizing NGO Personnel"
}
] |
The criminalization of sea rescue in the Mediterranean refers to the increase in policing of individuals and search and rescue (SAR) NGOs aiding migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. It further encompasses the increase in de-legitimisation attempts of SAR NGOs by governments, high-profile politicians and officials.
|
2023-12-13T09:32:59Z
|
2023-12-18T03:31:17Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminalization_of_sea_rescue_in_the_Mediterranean
|
75,552,418 |
Mmusi Kgafela
|
Mmusi Kgafela is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Trade and Industry in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mmusi Kgafela is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Trade and Industry in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Mmusi Kgafela is a Botswanan politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Trade and Industry in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. His term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:33:34Z
|
2023-12-19T08:01:30Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mmusi_Kgafela
|
75,552,431 |
Philda Kereng
|
Philda Kereng is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Deputy Minister of Local Government and Rural Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Philda Kereng is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Deputy Minister of Local Government and Rural Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Philda Kereng is a Botswanan politician and educator. She is the current Deputy Minister of Local Government and Rural Development in Botswana, having been appointed to the position in 2019 by the current president of Botswana, Mokgweetsi Masisi. Her term began on 13 February 2022.
|
2023-12-13T09:34:41Z
|
2023-12-13T09:34:41Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philda_Kereng
|
75,552,482 |
The Affairs of Harlequin
|
The Affairs of Harlequin is a 1951 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It starred Robert Peach as George Harlequin.
According to The Age the first episode "The Affair of the Golden Girl" focuses on newsporter Richard Ashley (played by Richard Davies) who "becomes involved when he meets Irishman Mike McCreary in a Munich cafe, and under takes to deliver a message to the mysterious Harlequin. Ashley joins Harlequin on an assignment to combat a racket in fake exit permits."
The series was highly successful.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Affairs of Harlequin is a 1951 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It starred Robert Peach as George Harlequin.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "According to The Age the first episode \"The Affair of the Golden Girl\" focuses on newsporter Richard Ashley (played by Richard Davies) who \"becomes involved when he meets Irishman Mike McCreary in a Munich cafe, and under takes to deliver a message to the mysterious Harlequin. Ashley joins Harlequin on an assignment to combat a racket in fake exit permits.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The series was highly successful.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Affairs of Harlequin is a 1951 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It starred Robert Peach as George Harlequin. According to The Age the first episode "The Affair of the Golden Girl" focuses on newsporter Richard Ashley who "becomes involved when he meets Irishman Mike McCreary in a Munich cafe, and under takes to deliver a message to the
mysterious Harlequin. Ashley joins Harlequin on an assignment to combat a racket in
fake exit permits." The series was highly successful.
|
2023-12-13T09:44:45Z
|
2023-12-13T10:07:00Z
|
[
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"Template:Infobox radio show"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Affairs_of_Harlequin
|
75,552,486 |
Jacob Schmitt
|
Jacob Schmitt, also called Jakob, Jaques or Jacques, (2 November 1803 – June 1853) was a German composer and piano teacher who worked in Hamburg. He was born in Obernburg near Aschaffenburg and died in Hamburg.
Jacob Schmitt was the youngest of the seven children of Franz Bartholomäus Schmitt and Anna Maria Scheller; his oldest brother was the composer Aloys Schmitt. His father was already an aspiring musician, who supported his salary as a teacher by being an organist in the town’s parish church St. Peter and Paul. He supported his sons musically, giving them their first musical lessons and making sure, that they were taken up in the house of the music publisher Johann Anton André in Offenbach. There, Schmitt was taught by André as well as his brother Aloys and had his first performances as a piano accompanist in 1814. At this time in the view of the public, he was the little brother of the already well-known Aloys whom he had a close relationship with.
Schmitt’s way into the world of the free music business began around 1823. This becomes clear from an exchange of letters with his former patron André. In these letters, Schmitt initially asked for the financing of a new grand piano offering Andrè the rights to more compositions in return; after this request had been refused, Schmitt requested that at least his new works were included in André’s publishing and the support for a planned concert tour. He discovered that as an independent artist he no longer dealt with a patron but rather with a businessman and cooperation partner. At this time Schmitt stayed longer Mannheim where he taught the pianist Jakob Rosenhain.
Schmitt first visited Hamburg on a concert tour in 1825. There, he was received friendly by critics and settled in the city; public documents mention the years 1828/29, although contemporary sources already mention the year 1825. In 1827 Schmitt married the daughter of a merchant Henrica Worms in Obernburg. The first home of the Schmitt family in Hamburg was near the Altona's gate, subsequently Schmitt tried to endear the audience in Hamburg for example with his composition Les charmes de Hambourg which was his first composition published in Hamburg. For a short time, he was head of an orchestra association, the Apollo-Verein; but he resigned after a few years. His job as a teacher was more successful as he accompanied it with teaching materials for piano. Among his students were Diederich Krug, Henry Christian Timm and Otto Goldschmidt. The many moves into worse social areas of Hamburg as well as his letter correspondence at this time show that Schmitt lacked financial success. As a result, he dies lonely and poor in 1853.
Schmitt created over 330 works mainly for piano, amongst these numerous Sonatina, Divertissements, Nocturnes and other smaller pieces. These pieces are favoured in contemporary criticism. However, his only opera Alfred the Great (German:Alfred der Große) was not successful.
Robert Schumann was Schmitt’s most important contemporary critic. He saw Schmitt as a big talent, which never could or wanted to develop fully. Schumann especially valued Schmitt’s successful works like his concert op. 300 and the Grande Fantaisie brillante op. 225 as well as his teaching materials. As many critics of this time, he also compared Jakob to his brother Aloys Schmitt and concluded that Jacob had the greater talent, but Aloys was the superior artist and utilised his talent better. In the contemporary "Encyclopedia of the whole musical sciences or universal lexicon of the musical art" (German: “Encyclopädie der gesammten musikalischen Wissenschaften oder Universal-Lexikon der Tonkunst”) Aloys was also considered to be the more important artist. Only in the "Little musical conversations-lexicon" (German: "Kleinen musikalisches Conversations-Lexikon"), which was published by his musical publishing house in Hamburg and he was involved as an author, he was seen equally important to his brother.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Jacob Schmitt, also called Jakob, Jaques or Jacques, (2 November 1803 – June 1853) was a German composer and piano teacher who worked in Hamburg. He was born in Obernburg near Aschaffenburg and died in Hamburg.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Jacob Schmitt was the youngest of the seven children of Franz Bartholomäus Schmitt and Anna Maria Scheller; his oldest brother was the composer Aloys Schmitt. His father was already an aspiring musician, who supported his salary as a teacher by being an organist in the town’s parish church St. Peter and Paul. He supported his sons musically, giving them their first musical lessons and making sure, that they were taken up in the house of the music publisher Johann Anton André in Offenbach. There, Schmitt was taught by André as well as his brother Aloys and had his first performances as a piano accompanist in 1814. At this time in the view of the public, he was the little brother of the already well-known Aloys whom he had a close relationship with.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Schmitt’s way into the world of the free music business began around 1823. This becomes clear from an exchange of letters with his former patron André. In these letters, Schmitt initially asked for the financing of a new grand piano offering Andrè the rights to more compositions in return; after this request had been refused, Schmitt requested that at least his new works were included in André’s publishing and the support for a planned concert tour. He discovered that as an independent artist he no longer dealt with a patron but rather with a businessman and cooperation partner. At this time Schmitt stayed longer Mannheim where he taught the pianist Jakob Rosenhain.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Schmitt first visited Hamburg on a concert tour in 1825. There, he was received friendly by critics and settled in the city; public documents mention the years 1828/29, although contemporary sources already mention the year 1825. In 1827 Schmitt married the daughter of a merchant Henrica Worms in Obernburg. The first home of the Schmitt family in Hamburg was near the Altona's gate, subsequently Schmitt tried to endear the audience in Hamburg for example with his composition Les charmes de Hambourg which was his first composition published in Hamburg. For a short time, he was head of an orchestra association, the Apollo-Verein; but he resigned after a few years. His job as a teacher was more successful as he accompanied it with teaching materials for piano. Among his students were Diederich Krug, Henry Christian Timm and Otto Goldschmidt. The many moves into worse social areas of Hamburg as well as his letter correspondence at this time show that Schmitt lacked financial success. As a result, he dies lonely and poor in 1853.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Schmitt created over 330 works mainly for piano, amongst these numerous Sonatina, Divertissements, Nocturnes and other smaller pieces. These pieces are favoured in contemporary criticism. However, his only opera Alfred the Great (German:Alfred der Große) was not successful.",
"title": "Works"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Robert Schumann was Schmitt’s most important contemporary critic. He saw Schmitt as a big talent, which never could or wanted to develop fully. Schumann especially valued Schmitt’s successful works like his concert op. 300 and the Grande Fantaisie brillante op. 225 as well as his teaching materials. As many critics of this time, he also compared Jakob to his brother Aloys Schmitt and concluded that Jacob had the greater talent, but Aloys was the superior artist and utilised his talent better. In the contemporary \"Encyclopedia of the whole musical sciences or universal lexicon of the musical art\" (German: “Encyclopädie der gesammten musikalischen Wissenschaften oder Universal-Lexikon der Tonkunst”) Aloys was also considered to be the more important artist. Only in the \"Little musical conversations-lexicon\" (German: \"Kleinen musikalisches Conversations-Lexikon\"), which was published by his musical publishing house in Hamburg and he was involved as an author, he was seen equally important to his brother.",
"title": "Works"
}
] |
Jacob Schmitt, also called Jakob, Jaques or Jacques, was a German composer and piano teacher who worked in Hamburg. He was born in Obernburg near Aschaffenburg and died in Hamburg.
|
2023-12-13T09:45:32Z
|
2023-12-14T20:08:51Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Schmitt
|
75,552,490 |
Margaret Anne Somerville
|
Margaret Anne Sommerville MBE (24 September 1912 – 6 August 2014) worked as a 'cottage mother' at the Croker Island Mission which was run by the Methodist Overseas Mission. She is best remembered for her bravery in assisting with the evacuation of 95 Aboriginal children from there during World War II during the Bombing of Darwin. This evacuation is commonly referred to as the 'Croker Island Exodus'.
She returned to Croker Island in 1946 and remained there until 1965.
She recorded her experiences in the book: They crossed a continent : 3,000 miles with 95 children (1967).
She was also interviewed by the National Library of Australia in 2001 as part of the Bringing them home oral history project.
Somerville was born in Lismore in 1912 and was the daughter of James Herbert and Margaret Jessie Somerville. Her father was a Methodist Minister and they moved regularly throughout her childhood throughout New South Wales with the most time spent in Newcastle and Sydney. She had two younger brothers.
From her father's influence, she was interested in missions from an early age and felt called to serve God in this way. In her oral history recording she recalls having particular skills in handwork, which she used to sell to local shops, and that she viewed these as the primary skills she had to offer in a mission role. Before moving to Croker Island she also used the sale of her handwork to fundraise for the Bible Society Australia.
She saw the role at Croker Island (Minjilang) advertised in the Missionary Review in August 1941 and, after applying she was initially afraid she would not be accepted to the role as she had no training. However, the Mission Society were looking for someone to teach the children cooking and sewing and these were areas where she did well so she was successful.
Somerville began working at Croker Island Mission when it was first opened and arrived there in November 1941 when she was 29 years old. To take up the role she initially travelled to Darwin on the Merka, a journey of approximately 10 days, and then on to Goulburn Island (to pick up more children who had already been evacuated from Darwin) before then sailing on to Croker Island. Children at the home were from throughout the Northern Territory and many came from institutions such as The Bungalow (in Alice Springs) and the Pine Creek Home (in Pine Creek); they were all Aboriginal children who were considered 'half-caste' by the polices of the day.
In Croker Island work had not been completed on the accommodation or facilities and many were 'shells' with no flooring. The decision to move there was expedited by the lead up to the tropical Wet Season and, soon after, the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The time spent there was short-lived with a civilian evacuation order sent through on 13 February 1942 asking that all women and children leave the region at once. Darwin was bombed, for the first time in the war, on 19 February 1942 and, despite knowing the children had to be evacuated, there was no naval shipping available to assist them.
In March 1942 many of the children and missionaries were evacuated but Somerville elected to stay with the remaining children, alongside Jess March, Beryl Adams and Sister Olive Peake. On 7 April 1942 they were picked up by the Larrpan to begin their journey to Sydney. On this trip Somerville's practical skills were viewed as invaluable as she organised and assisted with the preparation of large amounts of food, preparing meals for 100 people in difficult conditions.
Their journey to Sydney took 6 weeks overland and Somerville's group included missionaries and 99 children (more had joined when they passed through Alice Springs).One child died of a cerebral haemorrhage following a fall at Oenpelli and Somerville discusses this incident in her oral history. They had walked to Oenpelli and went by army truck to Alice Springs and then via rail to Sydney.
When they arrived in Sydney Somerville was excited to present the children to her mother and recalled:
I don't know how we did it. It was just living one day at a time. I loved the work with the children. That was my calling and I believe it was right and I enjoyed every minute of it.
The children were sent to live at the Crusader's Camp in Otford and Somerville became an assistant supervisor there. During their time there two of the children were found to have leprosy and sent to Prince Henry Hospital and another died during surgery to remove his tonsils.
She returned to Croker Island in 1946, after the end of the war, and was the only member of the original group of missionaries to do so. She worked there for 20 years as a 'cottage mother'.
Connie Cole, one of the children evacuated had nothing but praise for Somerville and said: "[s]he was the most wonderful woman that I ever come across".
In 1965 Somerville retired and returned to Sydney where she took care of her parents. Croker Island Mission closed soon after, in 1968, and children were transferred to Somerville Cottage Homes in Darwin and to placements interstate.
She continued to be involved in the church and mission activities. She visited the Northern Territory regularly.
She died 6 August 2014 at the age of 101 on the Central Coast, New South Wales).
A full list of Northern Territory Evacuees from Northern Territory, including the children from Croker Island, is available online through the National Archives of Australia via this link.
The Somerville Cottages, also known as the Somerville Homes, established by the Uniting Church and the Methodist Overseas Mission, were named for Somerville. These were six cottages, in the suburbs of Darwin, that accommodated children in a 'family group setting' under the care of cottage parents; they operated from 1968 until the 1980s.
She is a signatory on the Darwin Commemorative Wall Quilt held by Library & Archives NT.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Margaret Anne Sommerville MBE (24 September 1912 – 6 August 2014) worked as a 'cottage mother' at the Croker Island Mission which was run by the Methodist Overseas Mission. She is best remembered for her bravery in assisting with the evacuation of 95 Aboriginal children from there during World War II during the Bombing of Darwin. This evacuation is commonly referred to as the 'Croker Island Exodus'.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She returned to Croker Island in 1946 and remained there until 1965.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "She recorded her experiences in the book: They crossed a continent : 3,000 miles with 95 children (1967).",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "She was also interviewed by the National Library of Australia in 2001 as part of the Bringing them home oral history project.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Somerville was born in Lismore in 1912 and was the daughter of James Herbert and Margaret Jessie Somerville. Her father was a Methodist Minister and they moved regularly throughout her childhood throughout New South Wales with the most time spent in Newcastle and Sydney. She had two younger brothers.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "From her father's influence, she was interested in missions from an early age and felt called to serve God in this way. In her oral history recording she recalls having particular skills in handwork, which she used to sell to local shops, and that she viewed these as the primary skills she had to offer in a mission role. Before moving to Croker Island she also used the sale of her handwork to fundraise for the Bible Society Australia.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "She saw the role at Croker Island (Minjilang) advertised in the Missionary Review in August 1941 and, after applying she was initially afraid she would not be accepted to the role as she had no training. However, the Mission Society were looking for someone to teach the children cooking and sewing and these were areas where she did well so she was successful.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Somerville began working at Croker Island Mission when it was first opened and arrived there in November 1941 when she was 29 years old. To take up the role she initially travelled to Darwin on the Merka, a journey of approximately 10 days, and then on to Goulburn Island (to pick up more children who had already been evacuated from Darwin) before then sailing on to Croker Island. Children at the home were from throughout the Northern Territory and many came from institutions such as The Bungalow (in Alice Springs) and the Pine Creek Home (in Pine Creek); they were all Aboriginal children who were considered 'half-caste' by the polices of the day.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In Croker Island work had not been completed on the accommodation or facilities and many were 'shells' with no flooring. The decision to move there was expedited by the lead up to the tropical Wet Season and, soon after, the attack on Pearl Harbor.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The time spent there was short-lived with a civilian evacuation order sent through on 13 February 1942 asking that all women and children leave the region at once. Darwin was bombed, for the first time in the war, on 19 February 1942 and, despite knowing the children had to be evacuated, there was no naval shipping available to assist them.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "In March 1942 many of the children and missionaries were evacuated but Somerville elected to stay with the remaining children, alongside Jess March, Beryl Adams and Sister Olive Peake. On 7 April 1942 they were picked up by the Larrpan to begin their journey to Sydney. On this trip Somerville's practical skills were viewed as invaluable as she organised and assisted with the preparation of large amounts of food, preparing meals for 100 people in difficult conditions.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Their journey to Sydney took 6 weeks overland and Somerville's group included missionaries and 99 children (more had joined when they passed through Alice Springs).One child died of a cerebral haemorrhage following a fall at Oenpelli and Somerville discusses this incident in her oral history. They had walked to Oenpelli and went by army truck to Alice Springs and then via rail to Sydney.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "When they arrived in Sydney Somerville was excited to present the children to her mother and recalled:",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "I don't know how we did it. It was just living one day at a time. I loved the work with the children. That was my calling and I believe it was right and I enjoyed every minute of it.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "The children were sent to live at the Crusader's Camp in Otford and Somerville became an assistant supervisor there. During their time there two of the children were found to have leprosy and sent to Prince Henry Hospital and another died during surgery to remove his tonsils.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "She returned to Croker Island in 1946, after the end of the war, and was the only member of the original group of missionaries to do so. She worked there for 20 years as a 'cottage mother'.",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "Connie Cole, one of the children evacuated had nothing but praise for Somerville and said: \"[s]he was the most wonderful woman that I ever come across\".",
"title": "Life in the Northern Territory"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "In 1965 Somerville retired and returned to Sydney where she took care of her parents. Croker Island Mission closed soon after, in 1968, and children were transferred to Somerville Cottage Homes in Darwin and to placements interstate.",
"title": "Later life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "She continued to be involved in the church and mission activities. She visited the Northern Territory regularly.",
"title": "Later life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "She died 6 August 2014 at the age of 101 on the Central Coast, New South Wales).",
"title": "Later life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "A full list of Northern Territory Evacuees from Northern Territory, including the children from Croker Island, is available online through the National Archives of Australia via this link.",
"title": "Resources"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "The Somerville Cottages, also known as the Somerville Homes, established by the Uniting Church and the Methodist Overseas Mission, were named for Somerville. These were six cottages, in the suburbs of Darwin, that accommodated children in a 'family group setting' under the care of cottage parents; they operated from 1968 until the 1980s.",
"title": "Legacy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "She is a signatory on the Darwin Commemorative Wall Quilt held by Library & Archives NT.",
"title": "Legacy"
}
] |
Margaret Anne Sommerville worked as a 'cottage mother' at the Croker Island Mission which was run by the Methodist Overseas Mission. She is best remembered for her bravery in assisting with the evacuation of 95 Aboriginal children from there during World War II during the Bombing of Darwin. This evacuation is commonly referred to as the 'Croker Island Exodus'. She returned to Croker Island in 1946 and remained there until 1965. She recorded her experiences in the book: They crossed a continent : 3,000 miles with 95 children (1967). She was also interviewed by the National Library of Australia in 2001 as part of the Bringing them home oral history project.
|
2023-12-13T09:45:53Z
|
2023-12-17T23:13:38Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Post-nominals",
"Template:Quote",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Anne_Somerville
|
75,552,494 |
Rabichandra Singh Moirangthem
|
Rabichandra Singh Moirangthem (born 3 August 2001) is an Indian field hockey player from Manipur. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Petroleum Sports Promotion Board in the domestic tournaments.
Moirangthem is from Thoya Leikai village in Moirang, Manipur. His is born to Bheigyabati Devi and late Nimai Singh. His father passed away in 2016. He was the youngest of four siblings. His elder brother Debid Singh, who was a state hockey player, joined Indian Army to meet the family's financial needs.
Moirangthem started playing hockey at the age of 10, when he attended a coaching camp at the All Moirang Hockey Association. After the camp, the coach took his for trials at the Sports Authority of India training centre (SAI) hostel in Imphal, where he was selected as an inmate in 2012. He played for SAI, Imphal till 2016. During the Sub-Junior Nationals at Imphal, he was spotted to attend the selection trials for National Hockey Academy at Delhi. He passed the trials and joined the academy. After the Junior World Cup, he was given a three-year scholarship from 2019 to 2022 by the Petroleum Sports Promotion Board (PSPB). He also played the FIH Hockey 5s and got a gold for India at Lausanne in June 2022. He was felicitated by the Manipur government after his return from Lausanne.
He was selected for the Senior India National camp in January 2022 and made the cut to make his Senior India debut two months later FIH Pro League tie against Argentina in March 2022. He also played for India in the Hockey5s format and was part of the team that won gold at the inaugural edition of Hero Hockey five-a-side Championship at Lausanne in June 2022. He also represented senior India in the FIH Hockey Pro League (M) for the years 2021–22, 2022–23 and 2023–24.
Moirangthem was selected for the Junior national camp in 2017 and made his India debut at the Sultan of Johor Cup in October. He then played the 3rd Youth Olympic Games 2018 and was part of the Silver-winning Indian junior team where he scored four goals. Later, he represented India in the FIH Odisha Hockey Men's Junior World Cup Bhubaneswar 2021, where India finished fourth.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Rabichandra Singh Moirangthem (born 3 August 2001) is an Indian field hockey player from Manipur. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Petroleum Sports Promotion Board in the domestic tournaments.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Moirangthem is from Thoya Leikai village in Moirang, Manipur. His is born to Bheigyabati Devi and late Nimai Singh. His father passed away in 2016. He was the youngest of four siblings. His elder brother Debid Singh, who was a state hockey player, joined Indian Army to meet the family's financial needs.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Moirangthem started playing hockey at the age of 10, when he attended a coaching camp at the All Moirang Hockey Association. After the camp, the coach took his for trials at the Sports Authority of India training centre (SAI) hostel in Imphal, where he was selected as an inmate in 2012. He played for SAI, Imphal till 2016. During the Sub-Junior Nationals at Imphal, he was spotted to attend the selection trials for National Hockey Academy at Delhi. He passed the trials and joined the academy. After the Junior World Cup, he was given a three-year scholarship from 2019 to 2022 by the Petroleum Sports Promotion Board (PSPB). He also played the FIH Hockey 5s and got a gold for India at Lausanne in June 2022. He was felicitated by the Manipur government after his return from Lausanne.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "He was selected for the Senior India National camp in January 2022 and made the cut to make his Senior India debut two months later FIH Pro League tie against Argentina in March 2022. He also played for India in the Hockey5s format and was part of the team that won gold at the inaugural edition of Hero Hockey five-a-side Championship at Lausanne in June 2022. He also represented senior India in the FIH Hockey Pro League (M) for the years 2021–22, 2022–23 and 2023–24.",
"title": "Senior India career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Moirangthem was selected for the Junior national camp in 2017 and made his India debut at the Sultan of Johor Cup in October. He then played the 3rd Youth Olympic Games 2018 and was part of the Silver-winning Indian junior team where he scored four goals. Later, he represented India in the FIH Odisha Hockey Men's Junior World Cup Bhubaneswar 2021, where India finished fourth.",
"title": "Junior India debut"
}
] |
Rabichandra Singh Moirangthem is an Indian field hockey player from Manipur. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Petroleum Sports Promotion Board in the domestic tournaments.
|
2023-12-13T09:46:47Z
|
2023-12-29T03:46:27Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabichandra_Singh_Moirangthem
|
75,552,511 |
Mae Jackson (poet)
|
Mae Jackson (born 1946) is an African-American poet and activist.
Jackson was born in Earle, Arkansas, on January 3, 1946. Gowing up in New Orleans, she became an activist at an early age. Aged 11 she joined a NAACP boycott of New Orleans variety stores. Her family later moved to Brooklyn, and she worked for the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). She was expelled from her high school, Sarah J. Hale Vocational High School in Brooklyn, after her conversion to Islam, and was absent at her high school graduation two weeks later, attending a demonstration.
Jackson studied at the New School for Social Research in 1966-67, and worked as a national staff member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). She helped to organize the Black Women's Liberation Committee in January 1969.
Jackson's first published work was a short story, 'I Remember Omar', published in Negro Digest in June 1969. Her collection Can I Poet With You, appeared in 1969 and was awarded the 1970 Conrad Kent Rivers Memorial Award by Negro Digest magazine (renamed Black World that year). She was published by Dudley Randall's Broadside Press. Her poetry was anthologised in Black Spirits (1971), Black Out Loud (1971) and The Poetry of Black America (1974) She has written for newspapers and magazines including Black World, Essence, Black Creation, and Black Scholar.
In the early 1970s Jackson moved into teaching, first as a substitute nursery and kindergarten teacher and then teaching creative writing in junior high school. She was a member of the Brewery Puppet Troupe in 1974-75, and took part in the Negro Ensemble Company Playwrights Workshop. In 1975 she became a court social worker at Brooklyn Family Court. She has also worked as an instructor at Cell Block Theatre, Bronx Men's House of Detention, Queens Men's House of Detention, Metropolitan Correctional Facilities, Loft Film and Theatre Center, and South Jamaica Senior Citizens Center.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mae Jackson (born 1946) is an African-American poet and activist.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Jackson was born in Earle, Arkansas, on January 3, 1946. Gowing up in New Orleans, she became an activist at an early age. Aged 11 she joined a NAACP boycott of New Orleans variety stores. Her family later moved to Brooklyn, and she worked for the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). She was expelled from her high school, Sarah J. Hale Vocational High School in Brooklyn, after her conversion to Islam, and was absent at her high school graduation two weeks later, attending a demonstration.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Jackson studied at the New School for Social Research in 1966-67, and worked as a national staff member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). She helped to organize the Black Women's Liberation Committee in January 1969.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Jackson's first published work was a short story, 'I Remember Omar', published in Negro Digest in June 1969. Her collection Can I Poet With You, appeared in 1969 and was awarded the 1970 Conrad Kent Rivers Memorial Award by Negro Digest magazine (renamed Black World that year). She was published by Dudley Randall's Broadside Press. Her poetry was anthologised in Black Spirits (1971), Black Out Loud (1971) and The Poetry of Black America (1974) She has written for newspapers and magazines including Black World, Essence, Black Creation, and Black Scholar.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In the early 1970s Jackson moved into teaching, first as a substitute nursery and kindergarten teacher and then teaching creative writing in junior high school. She was a member of the Brewery Puppet Troupe in 1974-75, and took part in the Negro Ensemble Company Playwrights Workshop. In 1975 she became a court social worker at Brooklyn Family Court. She has also worked as an instructor at Cell Block Theatre, Bronx Men's House of Detention, Queens Men's House of Detention, Metropolitan Correctional Facilities, Loft Film and Theatre Center, and South Jamaica Senior Citizens Center.",
"title": "Life"
}
] |
Mae Jackson is an African-American poet and activist.
|
2023-12-13T09:51:50Z
|
2023-12-26T15:54:03Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mae_Jackson_(poet)
|
75,552,524 |
FIFA Women's Player of the Year
|
REDIRECT The Best FIFA Women's Player#FIFA Women's Player of the Year (including predecessors)
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "REDIRECT The Best FIFA Women's Player#FIFA Women's Player of the Year (including predecessors)",
"title": ""
}
] |
REDIRECT The Best FIFA Women's Player#FIFA Women's Player of the Year
|
2023-12-13T09:56:41Z
|
2023-12-13T09:56:41Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIFA_Women%27s_Player_of_the_Year
|
75,552,526 |
Hans Hipp
|
Hans Hipp (10 November 1912, Wannweil – February 2001, Friedberg) was a German football manager.
In 1928, Hipp joined SSV Reutlingen 05. Two years later, he was promoted to the Reutlingen first team.
After the Second World War he began his managerial career at TG Gönningen. He then became a coach at TSV Eningen and SV Wannweil. In October 1950, Hipp became head coach at SSV Reutlingen and was relegated from the Oberliga Süd with SSV at the end of the 1950/51 season. In the following season, Hipp took over as manager of 1. FC Pforzheim from October 1951. From the start of the 1952/53 season, he coached VfB Mühlburg until 30 April 1953, which became Karlsruher SC on 16 October 1952.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Hans Hipp (10 November 1912, Wannweil – February 2001, Friedberg) was a German football manager.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In 1928, Hipp joined SSV Reutlingen 05. Two years later, he was promoted to the Reutlingen first team.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "After the Second World War he began his managerial career at TG Gönningen. He then became a coach at TSV Eningen and SV Wannweil. In October 1950, Hipp became head coach at SSV Reutlingen and was relegated from the Oberliga Süd with SSV at the end of the 1950/51 season. In the following season, Hipp took over as manager of 1. FC Pforzheim from October 1951. From the start of the 1952/53 season, he coached VfB Mühlburg until 30 April 1953, which became Karlsruher SC on 16 October 1952.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Hans Hipp was a German football manager.
|
2023-12-13T09:57:10Z
|
2023-12-30T00:03:25Z
|
[
"Template:TSV 1860 Munich managers",
"Template:Hannover 96 managers",
"Template:Grazer AK managers",
"Template:Expand German",
"Template:Infobox football biography",
"Template:Karlsruher SC managers",
"Template:Refimprove",
"Template:WorldFootball.net",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Hipp
|
75,552,528 |
José Didier Tonato
|
José Didier Tonato is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Living Environment and Sustainable Development in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "José Didier Tonato is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Living Environment and Sustainable Development in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
José Didier Tonato is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Living Environment and Sustainable Development in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T09:57:35Z
|
2023-12-18T07:06:52Z
|
[
"Template:S-ach",
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"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
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"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Didier_Tonato
|
75,552,537 |
Gaston Dossouhoui
|
Gaston Dossouhoui is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Gaston Dossouhoui is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Gaston Dossouhoui is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T09:59:10Z
|
2023-12-18T12:58:18Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaston_Dossouhoui
|
75,552,542 |
Buntaanga
|
Buntaanga is a community located in the Kumbungu District of the Northern Region of Ghana. It is host to the Buntaanga Irrigation Dam where significant crop farming and fishing activities are undertaken.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Buntaanga is a community located in the Kumbungu District of the Northern Region of Ghana. It is host to the Buntaanga Irrigation Dam where significant crop farming and fishing activities are undertaken.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Buntaanga is a community located in the Kumbungu District of the Northern Region of Ghana. It is host to the Buntaanga Irrigation Dam where significant crop farming and fishing activities are undertaken.
|
2023-12-13T10:00:10Z
|
2023-12-16T14:27:24Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buntaanga
|
75,552,543 |
Alassane Seidou
|
Alassane Seidou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Decentralization and Local Governance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Alassane Seidou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Decentralization and Local Governance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Alassane Seidou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Decentralization and Local Governance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:00:11Z
|
2023-12-21T00:30:30Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
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"Template:S-start",
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"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alassane_Seidou
|
75,552,547 |
2024 in Guinea
|
Events in the year 2024 in Guinea.
Source:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in Guinea.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] |
Events in the year 2024 in Guinea.
|
2023-12-13T10:01:05Z
|
2023-12-13T10:01:05Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Year in Guinea",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal bar",
"Template:Dynamic list",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Years in Guinea",
"Template:Year in Africa"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Guinea
|
75,552,566 |
Shizuka Ijūin
|
Tadaki Nishiyama (Japanese: 西山 忠来; 9 February 1950 – 24 November 2023), better known under the pen names Shizuka Ijūin (Japanese: 伊集院静) and Ayumi Date (Japanese: 伊達 歩), was a Japanese writer and lyricist.
Born in Hōfu, Ijūin graduated in letters from Rikkyo University and then worked several years as commercial director for an advertising agency. In 1981 he made his literary debut with the novel Satsuki, and in 1992 he won the Naoki Prize for the collection of short stories Ukezuki. Among his best known works, the autobiographical novel trilogy Kaikyo and the best-selling series of essays Otona no Ryugi, which sold over 2 million copies. He was also active as a lyricist, penning several hits for Masahiko Kondō.
Ijūin was married to Masako Natsume from 1984 to 1985, when she died of leukemia, and to actress Hiroko Shino [ja] from 1992 until his death.
After surviving a subarachnoid haemorrhage in 2020, Ijūin died of intrahepatic bile ducts cancer on 24 November 2023, at the age of 73.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Tadaki Nishiyama (Japanese: 西山 忠来; 9 February 1950 – 24 November 2023), better known under the pen names Shizuka Ijūin (Japanese: 伊集院静) and Ayumi Date (Japanese: 伊達 歩), was a Japanese writer and lyricist.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in Hōfu, Ijūin graduated in letters from Rikkyo University and then worked several years as commercial director for an advertising agency. In 1981 he made his literary debut with the novel Satsuki, and in 1992 he won the Naoki Prize for the collection of short stories Ukezuki. Among his best known works, the autobiographical novel trilogy Kaikyo and the best-selling series of essays Otona no Ryugi, which sold over 2 million copies. He was also active as a lyricist, penning several hits for Masahiko Kondō.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Ijūin was married to Masako Natsume from 1984 to 1985, when she died of leukemia, and to actress Hiroko Shino [ja] from 1992 until his death.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "After surviving a subarachnoid haemorrhage in 2020, Ijūin died of intrahepatic bile ducts cancer on 24 November 2023, at the age of 73.",
"title": "Life and career"
}
] |
Tadaki Nishiyama, better known under the pen names Shizuka Ijūin and Ayumi Date, was a Japanese writer and lyricist.
|
2023-12-13T10:04:29Z
|
2023-12-26T12:01:50Z
|
[
"Template:Lang-ja",
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shizuka_Ij%C5%ABin
|
75,552,573 |
Gymnocalycium capillense
|
Gymnocalycium capillense is a species of Gymnocalycium cactus from Argentina.
Gymnocalycium capillense has a dull blue-green, broad-spherical plant body that reaches heights and diameters of up to 8 centimeters and produces numerous children. It has up to 13, more or less flat ribs that have low chin-like projections between the depressed areoles. The approximately 5 marginal spines are yellowish to white and up to 1.2 centimeters long.
The delicate pink-white flowers are up to 7 centimeters long and up to 6 centimeters in diameter. The club-shaped fruits have a bluish frost.
Gymnocalycium capillense is widespread in the Argentine province of Córdoba and grows at altitudes of 500 to 1500 meters.
The first description as Echinocactus capillensis was published in 1923 by Carl Schick. The specific epithet capillense refers to the occurrence of the species near Capilla del Monte. Carl Curt Hosseus placed the species in the genus Gymnocalycium in 1926.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Gymnocalycium capillense is a species of Gymnocalycium cactus from Argentina.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Gymnocalycium capillense has a dull blue-green, broad-spherical plant body that reaches heights and diameters of up to 8 centimeters and produces numerous children. It has up to 13, more or less flat ribs that have low chin-like projections between the depressed areoles. The approximately 5 marginal spines are yellowish to white and up to 1.2 centimeters long.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The delicate pink-white flowers are up to 7 centimeters long and up to 6 centimeters in diameter. The club-shaped fruits have a bluish frost.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Gymnocalycium capillense is widespread in the Argentine province of Córdoba and grows at altitudes of 500 to 1500 meters.",
"title": "Distribution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The first description as Echinocactus capillensis was published in 1923 by Carl Schick. The specific epithet capillense refers to the occurrence of the species near Capilla del Monte. Carl Curt Hosseus placed the species in the genus Gymnocalycium in 1926.",
"title": "Taxonomy"
}
] |
Gymnocalycium capillense is a species of Gymnocalycium cactus from Argentina.
|
2023-12-13T10:06:51Z
|
2023-12-23T23:53:24Z
|
[
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnocalycium_capillense
|
75,552,583 |
The Prince of Peace (radio serial)
|
The Prince of Peace is a 1950 Australian radio serial by Morris West about Jesus Christ. According to The Sun "each of the 39 episodes is self-contained, and the series presents a chronological story of Christ's life from His birth to. His resurrection. Each episode is told by an eye-witness — each a feasible character from one of the various social groups of polyglot Grneco-Roman Judea."
The story and scripts were agreed upon by the producers and committee of church representatives. Controversial matters were avoided. The names of the cast were not revealed.
The Melbourne Argus called it "a serial drama that will be appreciated by Roman Catholics, Protestants, indifferentists, and atheists alike."
The Advocate called it a "distinguished addition to the field of broadcast drama... The subject, a difficult one for radio presentation, has been handled with reverence and understanding, with, moreover, a feeling for its human as well as its spiritual values."
The Argus called it "very successful."
The show was played again in 1953 and 1959.
The series was so popular it led to a sequel, The Apostle of Peace also written and produced by West, which focused on Saint Paul. It was based on Luke's Acts of the Apostles, and letters written by Paul as he travelled through the empires of Rome, Greece and Syria. It started in September 1951.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Prince of Peace is a 1950 Australian radio serial by Morris West about Jesus Christ. According to The Sun \"each of the 39 episodes is self-contained, and the series presents a chronological story of Christ's life from His birth to. His resurrection. Each episode is told by an eye-witness — each a feasible character from one of the various social groups of polyglot Grneco-Roman Judea.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The story and scripts were agreed upon by the producers and committee of church representatives. Controversial matters were avoided. The names of the cast were not revealed.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Melbourne Argus called it \"a serial drama that will be appreciated by Roman Catholics, Protestants, indifferentists, and atheists alike.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Advocate called it a \"distinguished addition to the field of broadcast drama... The subject, a difficult one for radio presentation, has been handled with reverence and understanding, with, moreover, a feeling for its human as well as its spiritual values.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The Argus called it \"very successful.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The show was played again in 1953 and 1959.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The series was so popular it led to a sequel, The Apostle of Peace also written and produced by West, which focused on Saint Paul. It was based on Luke's Acts of the Apostles, and letters written by Paul as he travelled through the empires of Rome, Greece and Syria. It started in September 1951.",
"title": "The Apostle of Peace"
}
] |
The Prince of Peace is a 1950 Australian radio serial by Morris West about Jesus Christ. According to The Sun "each of the 39 episodes is self-contained, and the series presents a chronological story of Christ's life from His birth to. His resurrection. Each episode is told by an eye-witness — each a feasible character from one of the various social groups of polyglot Grneco-Roman Judea." The story and scripts were agreed upon by the producers and committee of church representatives. Controversial matters were avoided. The names of the cast were not revealed. The Melbourne Argus called it "a serial drama that will be appreciated by Roman
Catholics, Protestants, indifferentists, and atheists alike." The Advocate called it a "distinguished addition to the field of broadcast drama... The subject, a difficult one for radio presentation, has been handled with reverence and understanding, with, moreover, a feeling for its human as well as its spiritual values." The Argus called it "very successful." The show was played again in 1953 and 1959.
|
2023-12-13T10:10:03Z
|
2023-12-24T01:47:21Z
|
[
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prince_of_Peace_(radio_serial)
|
75,552,607 |
2023–24 U-17 Youth Cup
|
The 2023–24 Youth League, also known as 2023–24 U-17 Youth League, is the fourteenth season of the Indian Youth League and the second season of the under-17 category.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2023–24 Youth League, also known as 2023–24 U-17 Youth League, is the fourteenth season of the Indian Youth League and the second season of the under-17 category.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "Group stage"
}
] |
The 2023–24 Youth League, also known as 2023–24 U-17 Youth League, is the fourteenth season of the Indian Youth League and the second season of the under-17 category.
|
2023-12-13T10:17:28Z
|
2023-12-31T15:45:58Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use Indian English",
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"Template:Reflist",
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"Template:2023–24 in Indian football",
"Template:Updated",
"Template:Dts",
"Template:Elite League (India)",
"Template:Indian football league seasons"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324_U-17_Youth_Cup
|
75,552,612 |
Smidtia amoena
|
Smidtia amoena is a species of fly in the family Tachinidae.
Tajikistan, British Isles, Belarus, Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Andorra, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Serbia, Spain, Turkey, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Japan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Iran, Russia, Transcaucasia, China.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Smidtia amoena is a species of fly in the family Tachinidae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Tajikistan, British Isles, Belarus, Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Andorra, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Serbia, Spain, Turkey, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Japan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Iran, Russia, Transcaucasia, China.",
"title": "Distribution"
}
] |
Smidtia amoena is a species of fly in the family Tachinidae.
|
2023-12-13T10:18:32Z
|
2023-12-13T10:18:32Z
|
[
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Tachinidae-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smidtia_amoena
|
75,552,613 |
Adidjatou Mathys
|
Adidjatou Mathys is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Labour and Public Service in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Adidjatou Mathys is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Labour and Public Service in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Adidjatou Mathys is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Labour and Public Service in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:18:42Z
|
2023-12-17T05:56:44Z
|
[
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-bef",
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"Template:Infobox officeholder",
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"Template:S-ach",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adidjatou_Mathys
|
75,552,621 |
Vajrayudha (disambiguation)
|
Vajrayudha is a legendary and ritualistic weapon in Hindu and Buddhist mythology.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Vajrayudha is a legendary and ritualistic weapon in Hindu and Buddhist mythology.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Vajrayudha is a legendary and ritualistic weapon in Hindu and Buddhist mythology. Vajrayudha (film), 1992 Indian Kannada language action film
Vajrayudha, ruler of the Ayudha dynasty from 770 to 783.
|
2023-12-13T10:19:38Z
|
2023-12-13T10:22:41Z
|
[
"Template:Disambiguation"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajrayudha_(disambiguation)
|
75,552,622 |
Christmess
|
Christmess is a 2023 Australian Christmas film from Heath Davis.
Three recovering addicts try to get through the festive season without relapsing, in Campbelltown in west Sydney, Australia.
An independent Australian film, it is written and directed by Heath Davis. Davis began writing an “authentic” Christmas film after Christmas 2020 when he spent time in isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic without work or family, and watched a lot of “bad Christmas films”. It is produced by Daniel Fenech, Cindy Pritchard and Matthew McCracken. Fundin for the film partially came from crowd-funding.
The film marks the feature film acting debut of Hannah Joy, the lead singer with rock band Middle Kids. Joy wrote several original songs for Christmess, including Empty Chair, Deadbeat Dads, and Boxing Day and performs all three songs in character during the film.
Principal photography got underway in Sydney in June 2022 with a three-week filming schedule.
The film had its world premiere at the Austin Film Festival on 29 October 2023. It was released in Australia on 30 November 2023.
Nadine Whitney in The Curb described the film as “painful, hopeful, gentle, and funny as hell.” Luke Buckmaster in The Guardian described it as “a very absorbing film, tenderly written and directed”.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Christmess is a 2023 Australian Christmas film from Heath Davis.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Three recovering addicts try to get through the festive season without relapsing, in Campbelltown in west Sydney, Australia.",
"title": "Premise"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "An independent Australian film, it is written and directed by Heath Davis. Davis began writing an “authentic” Christmas film after Christmas 2020 when he spent time in isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic without work or family, and watched a lot of “bad Christmas films”. It is produced by Daniel Fenech, Cindy Pritchard and Matthew McCracken. Fundin for the film partially came from crowd-funding.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The film marks the feature film acting debut of Hannah Joy, the lead singer with rock band Middle Kids. Joy wrote several original songs for Christmess, including Empty Chair, Deadbeat Dads, and Boxing Day and performs all three songs in character during the film.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Principal photography got underway in Sydney in June 2022 with a three-week filming schedule.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The film had its world premiere at the Austin Film Festival on 29 October 2023. It was released in Australia on 30 November 2023.",
"title": "Release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Nadine Whitney in The Curb described the film as “painful, hopeful, gentle, and funny as hell.” Luke Buckmaster in The Guardian described it as “a very absorbing film, tenderly written and directed”.",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Christmess is a 2023 Australian Christmas film from Heath Davis.
|
2023-12-13T10:19:48Z
|
2023-12-23T15:11:13Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmess
|
75,552,623 |
Véronique Tognifodé Mewanou
|
Véronique Tognifodé Mewanou is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Social Affairs and Micro-Finance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Véronique Tognifodé Mewanou is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Social Affairs and Micro-Finance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Véronique Tognifodé Mewanou is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Social Affairs and Micro-Finance in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:19:57Z
|
2023-12-18T13:01:08Z
|
[
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub",
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"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A9ronique_Tognifod%C3%A9_Mewanou
|
75,552,626 |
Benjamin Hounkpatin
|
Benjamin Hounkpatin is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Benjamin Hounkpatin is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Benjamin Hounkpatin is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Health in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:20:40Z
|
2023-12-17T05:59:30Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
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"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Hounkpatin
|
75,552,627 |
Sanguigni
|
Sanguigni is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sanguigni is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:",
"title": ""
}
] |
Sanguigni is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: Armand Sanguigni (1951–1984)
Domenico Sanguigni (1809–1882)
Battista di Biagio Sanguigni
|
2023-12-13T10:21:05Z
|
2023-12-25T05:14:08Z
|
[
"Template:Surname"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanguigni
|
75,552,643 |
Éléonore Yayi Ladekan
|
Éléonore Yayi Ladekan is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Éléonore Yayi Ladekan is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Éléonore Yayi Ladekan is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:21:55Z
|
2023-12-23T07:04:28Z
|
[
"Template:Benin-politician-stub",
"Template:Improve categories",
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"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89l%C3%A9onore_Yayi_Ladekan
|
75,552,644 |
Friedrich Theodor Fischer
|
Friedrich Theodor Fischer (September 8 1803 in Karlsruhe – November 14 1867) was a German architect and Baden construction official.
Fischer received his professional training at the state-sponsored private construction school in Karlsruhe, which had been run by Friedrich Weinbrenner since 1800. He was also trained in Huot's studio and at Franz Christian Gau's school of architecture in Paris. After passing the Baden state examination with distinction in 1826, he undertook major study trips through Germany, France and Italy.
After his return from Italy, Fischer was appointed administrator of the Heidelberg construction inspectorate in 1833, construction inspector in 1835 and construction officer in Karlsruhe in 1844, and was promoted to senior building inspector in 1855. In 1854, he succeeded Heinrich Hübsch as head of the Karlsruhe construction school. This construction school, which had been run by Weinbrenner as a private institution since 1800, had been part of the newly founded Polytechnical School Karlsruhe since 1825.
Also as the successor to Heinrich Hübsch, Fischer was appointed to head the Baden construction administration in 1864..
Fischer's further work includes around 30 Protestant and Catholic churches for rural parishes and smaller towns in Baden.
Media related to Category:Friedrich Theodor Fischer at Wikimedia Commons
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Friedrich Theodor Fischer (September 8 1803 in Karlsruhe – November 14 1867) was a German architect and Baden construction official.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fischer received his professional training at the state-sponsored private construction school in Karlsruhe, which had been run by Friedrich Weinbrenner since 1800. He was also trained in Huot's studio and at Franz Christian Gau's school of architecture in Paris. After passing the Baden state examination with distinction in 1826, he undertook major study trips through Germany, France and Italy.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "After his return from Italy, Fischer was appointed administrator of the Heidelberg construction inspectorate in 1833, construction inspector in 1835 and construction officer in Karlsruhe in 1844, and was promoted to senior building inspector in 1855. In 1854, he succeeded Heinrich Hübsch as head of the Karlsruhe construction school. This construction school, which had been run by Weinbrenner as a private institution since 1800, had been part of the newly founded Polytechnical School Karlsruhe since 1825.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Also as the successor to Heinrich Hübsch, Fischer was appointed to head the Baden construction administration in 1864..",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Fischer's further work includes around 30 Protestant and Catholic churches for rural parishes and smaller towns in Baden.",
"title": "Buildings and designs (selection)"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Media related to Category:Friedrich Theodor Fischer at Wikimedia Commons",
"title": "External links"
}
] |
Friedrich Theodor Fischer was a German architect and Baden construction official.
|
2023-12-13T10:22:13Z
|
2023-12-15T12:23:39Z
|
[
"Template:Hatnote",
"Template:Commons-inline",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Theodor_Fischer
|
75,552,653 |
Mahougnon Kakpo
|
Mahougnon Kakpo is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Secondary, Technical and Vocational Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mahougnon Kakpo is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Secondary, Technical and Vocational Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Mahougnon Kakpo is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Secondary, Technical and Vocational Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:23:43Z
|
2023-12-17T06:04:40Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahougnon_Kakpo
|
75,552,663 |
Women's National League (Bhutan)
|
Bhutan Women's National League is the women's football league in Bhutan.
The Bhutan Women's Football League was established in 2016.
The league's clubs would participate in a club licensing workshop with FIFA in 2022.
The 2023 season began in August 2023, with two rounds and six teams, determined from an earlier qualifier tournament participated by eight teams. A third round would be added to fulfill FIFA match requirements.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bhutan Women's National League is the women's football league in Bhutan.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Bhutan Women's Football League was established in 2016.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The league's clubs would participate in a club licensing workshop with FIFA in 2022.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The 2023 season began in August 2023, with two rounds and six teams, determined from an earlier qualifier tournament participated by eight teams. A third round would be added to fulfill FIFA match requirements.",
"title": "History"
}
] |
Bhutan Women's National League is the women's football league in Bhutan.
|
2023-12-13T10:25:17Z
|
2023-12-28T15:53:19Z
|
[
"Template:Top level women's association football leagues around the world",
"Template:Infobox football tournament",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
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"Template:Football in Bhutan",
"Template:AFC women's leagues"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_National_League_(Bhutan)
|
75,552,669 |
Karimou Salimane
|
Karimou Salimane is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Nursery and Primary Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
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"text": "Karimou Salimane is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Nursery and Primary Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
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"title": "References"
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Karimou Salimane is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Nursery and Primary Education in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:27:26Z
|
2023-12-21T00:30:23Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karimou_Salimane
|
75,552,670 |
Bárbara y Dick
|
Bárbara y Dick aka Barbara & Dick were a male and female vocal duo who had a number of hits in Argentina during the 1960s and 1970s.
A Vocal duo from Buenos Aires, they were active during the 1960s and then the 1970s to the 1990s. They were Bárbara Bourse and Fernando "Dick" Sustaita. An example of them having consecutive charts hits was on the week ending May 20, 1967 where they had three songs in the Argentina Top Ten. They had "Sacale Las Balas A Tu Fusil" at no. 4, "Sunny" at no. 7, and "Little Man" at no. 10. They were in the Argentine Top Ten with "Bottoms Up" in 1972.
As a solo artist, Bárbara recorded the album Como una ola which was released on Microfon PRK 1209 in 1985.
Fernando "Dick" Sustaita died in 2016.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bárbara y Dick aka Barbara & Dick were a male and female vocal duo who had a number of hits in Argentina during the 1960s and 1970s.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "A Vocal duo from Buenos Aires, they were active during the 1960s and then the 1970s to the 1990s. They were Bárbara Bourse and Fernando \"Dick\" Sustaita. An example of them having consecutive charts hits was on the week ending May 20, 1967 where they had three songs in the Argentina Top Ten. They had \"Sacale Las Balas A Tu Fusil\" at no. 4, \"Sunny\" at no. 7, and \"Little Man\" at no. 10. They were in the Argentine Top Ten with \"Bottoms Up\" in 1972.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "As a solo artist, Bárbara recorded the album Como una ola which was released on Microfon PRK 1209 in 1985.",
"title": "Later years"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Fernando \"Dick\" Sustaita died in 2016.",
"title": "Later years"
}
] |
Bárbara y Dick aka Barbara & Dick were a male and female vocal duo who had a number of hits in Argentina during the 1960s and 1970s.
|
2023-12-13T10:27:42Z
|
2023-12-18T10:24:05Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A1rbara_y_Dick
|
75,552,677 |
Babalola Jean-Michel Hervé Abimbola
|
Babalola Jean-Michel Hervé Abimbola is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Tourism, Culture and the Arts in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Babalola Jean-Michel Hervé Abimbola is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Tourism, Culture and the Arts in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
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Babalola Jean-Michel Hervé Abimbola is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Tourism, Culture and the Arts in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:28:36Z
|
2023-12-19T06:18:44Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babalola_Jean-Michel_Herv%C3%A9_Abimbola
|
75,552,679 |
Yiannis Kyrou
|
Yiannis Kyrou (1942 - 1991) was a Greek scenic and costume designer, known for his significant contributions to theater and television in Greece.
Born in Thessaloniki, Kyrou pursued his education in scenic design at the Athens School of Fine Arts and continued his studies in Germany. Kyrou's career in stage design commenced in 1967 with his involvement in the Hellenic Choreodrama group of Rallou Manou. He gained recognition for his work in Pithoprakta by Iannis Xenakis and Apology of Clytemnestra by Theodore Antoniou, which were acclaimed both in Greece and internationally. These productions were notably presented at the Shiraz Arts Festival in Iran. He also worked as a scenographer and costume designer for major Greek organizations (National Theatre of Greece and National Theatre of Northern Greece).
In television, Kyrou had a prominent role from 1975 onwards. He was responsible for the sets and costumes of over a hundred theatrical works broadcast on television, including several TV series and shows. His film contributions included working as an assistant to Michael Cacoyannis on When the Fish Came Out (1966) and designing sets and costumes for Kostas Karayiannis's film Poniro thilyko... katergara gynaika! (1980), featuring Aliki Vouyouklaki.
In the 1980s, Kyrou moved to Chania, where he founded the Amateur Experimental Theater Arena. This initiative aimed to provide a platform for theatrical expression, focusing on quality and experimentation beyond professional boundaries. Yiannis Kyrou passed away in 1991.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Yiannis Kyrou (1942 - 1991) was a Greek scenic and costume designer, known for his significant contributions to theater and television in Greece.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in Thessaloniki, Kyrou pursued his education in scenic design at the Athens School of Fine Arts and continued his studies in Germany. Kyrou's career in stage design commenced in 1967 with his involvement in the Hellenic Choreodrama group of Rallou Manou. He gained recognition for his work in Pithoprakta by Iannis Xenakis and Apology of Clytemnestra by Theodore Antoniou, which were acclaimed both in Greece and internationally. These productions were notably presented at the Shiraz Arts Festival in Iran. He also worked as a scenographer and costume designer for major Greek organizations (National Theatre of Greece and National Theatre of Northern Greece).",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In television, Kyrou had a prominent role from 1975 onwards. He was responsible for the sets and costumes of over a hundred theatrical works broadcast on television, including several TV series and shows. His film contributions included working as an assistant to Michael Cacoyannis on When the Fish Came Out (1966) and designing sets and costumes for Kostas Karayiannis's film Poniro thilyko... katergara gynaika! (1980), featuring Aliki Vouyouklaki.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In the 1980s, Kyrou moved to Chania, where he founded the Amateur Experimental Theater Arena. This initiative aimed to provide a platform for theatrical expression, focusing on quality and experimentation beyond professional boundaries. Yiannis Kyrou passed away in 1991.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Yiannis Kyrou was a Greek scenic and costume designer, known for his significant contributions to theater and television in Greece.
|
2023-12-13T10:30:03Z
|
2023-12-14T16:11:39Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yiannis_Kyrou
|
75,552,680 |
Fiona Harvey
|
Fiona Harvey is an environmental journalist at the British newspaper The Guardian. She previously worked for the Financial Times for more than ten years. She has won various awards including: the British Environment and Media Awards journalist of the year, and the Foreign Press Association award for Environment Story of the Year (twice). In 2020 she was in the BBC Woman’s Hour list of women in the UK who most help the environment.
Harvey graduated in English Literature from Cambridge University, became a journalist in 1994, and worked for some years writing and editing on information technology.
Harvey has attended almost every United Nations Climate Change conference since 2004, and interviewed many notable people, including Mikhail Gorbachev, Tony Blair, and Antonio Guterres.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Fiona Harvey is an environmental journalist at the British newspaper The Guardian. She previously worked for the Financial Times for more than ten years. She has won various awards including: the British Environment and Media Awards journalist of the year, and the Foreign Press Association award for Environment Story of the Year (twice). In 2020 she was in the BBC Woman’s Hour list of women in the UK who most help the environment.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Harvey graduated in English Literature from Cambridge University, became a journalist in 1994, and worked for some years writing and editing on information technology.",
"title": "Education and early career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Harvey has attended almost every United Nations Climate Change conference since 2004, and interviewed many notable people, including Mikhail Gorbachev, Tony Blair, and Antonio Guterres.",
"title": "Environmental journalism"
}
] |
Fiona Harvey is an environmental journalist at the British newspaper The Guardian. She previously worked for the Financial Times for more than ten years. She has won various awards including: the British Environment and Media Awards journalist of the year, and the Foreign Press Association award for Environment Story of the Year (twice). In 2020 she was in the BBC Woman’s Hour list of women in the UK who most help the environment.
|
2023-12-13T10:30:21Z
|
2023-12-25T00:08:56Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiona_Harvey
|
75,552,698 |
Hervé Yves Hehomey
|
Hervé Yves Hehomey is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Infrastructure and Transport in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Hervé Yves Hehomey is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Infrastructure and Transport in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Hervé Yves Hehomey is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Infrastructure and Transport in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:32:59Z
|
2023-12-19T07:46:19Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herv%C3%A9_Yves_Hehomey
|
75,552,704 |
Shadiya Alimatou Assouman
|
Shadiya Alimatou Assouman is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Industry and Trade in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Shadiya Alimatou Assouman is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Industry and Trade in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
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Shadiya Alimatou Assouman is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Industry and Trade in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:34:12Z
|
2023-12-19T07:50:54Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadiya_Alimatou_Assouman
|
75,552,725 |
Yahya Yuhana Mandi
|
The Yahya Yuhana Mandi (officially registered as the Mandi Yahya Youhanna) is a Mandaean temple (mandi) in Prestons, New South Wales, Australia. It is named after John the Baptist, who is known as Yahya Yuhana.
Khaldoon Majid Abdullah is currently the ganzibra (senior priest) of the Yahya Yuhana Mandi.>
|
[
{
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"text": "The Yahya Yuhana Mandi (officially registered as the Mandi Yahya Youhanna) is a Mandaean temple (mandi) in Prestons, New South Wales, Australia. It is named after John the Baptist, who is known as Yahya Yuhana.",
"title": ""
},
{
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"text": "Khaldoon Majid Abdullah is currently the ganzibra (senior priest) of the Yahya Yuhana Mandi.>",
"title": "Clergy"
}
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The Yahya Yuhana Mandi is a Mandaean temple (mandi) in Prestons, New South Wales, Australia. It is named after John the Baptist, who is known as Yahya Yuhana.
|
2023-12-13T10:39:15Z
|
2023-12-13T11:38:38Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahya_Yuhana_Mandi
|
75,552,731 |
Amagansett Mill Company
|
The Amagansett Mill Company (1829-1841) was an American company in Amagansett, New York. The windmill that it operated burned down in 1924.
The Amagansett Mill Company was a milling enterprise active from 1829 to 1841 in East Hampton, New York. Its operations were conducted on the grounds where the current railroad station is located, a site chosen after the company moved the mill there in 1829. Initially constructed in 1814 by Samuel Schellinger, the four-story tall smock mill was a central feature of the area until its destruction by fire in 1924.
John Baker (1809-1882), an integral figure in the company, managed the financial records as the agent and treasurer. His meticulous account-keeping provided a detailed ledger of the company's transactions, including purchases and work conducted, which has been preserved in historical archives. Ownership of the Amagansett Mill Company was shared among prominent local figures, including Thomas Edwards, Nathaniel Hand, Henry Baker, Samuel L. Mulford, Thomas J. Mulford, Ananias Baker, Charles R. Hand, Henry Schellinger, Talmage Barns, and Samuel Schellinger. Samuel Schellinger, an Amagansett craftsman, was credited with the original construction of the mill. In colonial times Amagansett was primarily agrarian, with farms owned by the sons of the founders of East Hampton whom expanded east when the threat of Indians declined. The oldest house in Amagansett dates to 1725. Originally Montaukett Indians were inhabitants of Amagansett, which translated means “place of good water.”
The company's constitution, following the list of shareholders, outlined the governance structure and management articles for the enterprise. The financial investment in the Amagansett Mill Company was substantial for the period, with total expenses reaching $1,042.09. This figure encompassed the costs associated with the initial purchase, the required work on the mill's structure, and the expenses related to its relocation.
Windmills played a large role in the community, they converted wind energy to power machinery that ground grain for east end farmers. There were laws to guide the community in how much of the crop was the millers share for providing the grist-mill.
In a significant transaction in 1871, the company divested from the mill by selling it to R.W. Ashby, an Englishman whose ownership was brief. He sold the mill seven years later in 1878 to Abraham Stratton Parsons (1829-1896). Parsons, recognizing the mill's value and potential, relocated it to Windmill Lane in Amagansett. It was here that the Parsons family continued to operate the mill, contributing to its status as a local institution for many years thereafter.
Tragedy struck on July 8, 1924, when the mill was engulfed in flames and ultimately reduced to ashes. The fire was attributed to a gasoline engine that was being stored inside the mill. This engine was not merely for operational purposes; it played a crucial role in providing water to the Windmill cottage and the neighboring Mulford cottages. Despite the loss, the legacy of the Amagansett Mill Company was commemorated in 1956 with the construction of a smaller replica at the original site. This act served to honor the historical significance of the mill and its impact on the local community.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Amagansett Mill Company (1829-1841) was an American company in Amagansett, New York. The windmill that it operated burned down in 1924.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Amagansett Mill Company was a milling enterprise active from 1829 to 1841 in East Hampton, New York. Its operations were conducted on the grounds where the current railroad station is located, a site chosen after the company moved the mill there in 1829. Initially constructed in 1814 by Samuel Schellinger, the four-story tall smock mill was a central feature of the area until its destruction by fire in 1924.",
"title": "Establishment"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "John Baker (1809-1882), an integral figure in the company, managed the financial records as the agent and treasurer. His meticulous account-keeping provided a detailed ledger of the company's transactions, including purchases and work conducted, which has been preserved in historical archives. Ownership of the Amagansett Mill Company was shared among prominent local figures, including Thomas Edwards, Nathaniel Hand, Henry Baker, Samuel L. Mulford, Thomas J. Mulford, Ananias Baker, Charles R. Hand, Henry Schellinger, Talmage Barns, and Samuel Schellinger. Samuel Schellinger, an Amagansett craftsman, was credited with the original construction of the mill. In colonial times Amagansett was primarily agrarian, with farms owned by the sons of the founders of East Hampton whom expanded east when the threat of Indians declined. The oldest house in Amagansett dates to 1725. Originally Montaukett Indians were inhabitants of Amagansett, which translated means “place of good water.”",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The company's constitution, following the list of shareholders, outlined the governance structure and management articles for the enterprise. The financial investment in the Amagansett Mill Company was substantial for the period, with total expenses reaching $1,042.09. This figure encompassed the costs associated with the initial purchase, the required work on the mill's structure, and the expenses related to its relocation.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Windmills played a large role in the community, they converted wind energy to power machinery that ground grain for east end farmers. There were laws to guide the community in how much of the crop was the millers share for providing the grist-mill.",
"title": "Sale of the windmill"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In a significant transaction in 1871, the company divested from the mill by selling it to R.W. Ashby, an Englishman whose ownership was brief. He sold the mill seven years later in 1878 to Abraham Stratton Parsons (1829-1896). Parsons, recognizing the mill's value and potential, relocated it to Windmill Lane in Amagansett. It was here that the Parsons family continued to operate the mill, contributing to its status as a local institution for many years thereafter.",
"title": "Sale of the windmill"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Tragedy struck on July 8, 1924, when the mill was engulfed in flames and ultimately reduced to ashes. The fire was attributed to a gasoline engine that was being stored inside the mill. This engine was not merely for operational purposes; it played a crucial role in providing water to the Windmill cottage and the neighboring Mulford cottages. Despite the loss, the legacy of the Amagansett Mill Company was commemorated in 1956 with the construction of a smaller replica at the original site. This act served to honor the historical significance of the mill and its impact on the local community.",
"title": "Loss"
}
] |
The Amagansett Mill Company (1829-1841) was an American company in Amagansett, New York. The windmill that it operated burned down in 1924.
|
2023-12-13T10:39:40Z
|
2023-12-31T07:48:54Z
|
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|
75,552,742 |
Shay Kanot
|
Shay Kanot (Hebrew: שי כנות) is an American film and television screenwriter and director, well known in Israel where he mostly lives.
Shay Kanot is considered one of the top directors working today in Israel, known for making the big summer comedies for the cinema and creating series for television that are artistically unique and have global sales. He is known for his creating and directing the four season crime series The Arbitrator (Ha-borer) starring Yehuda Levi and Ania Bukstein. Shay Kanot also directed Gal Gadot in her first and only Israeli movie The Goal (Kicking out Shoshana) sold to Apple TV+. The drama series Shay Kanot directed Pushers (Beni-or) was nominated for best-series in TV Series Festival Berlin. The series Three (Thalathe) he directed was nominated for best-series TV Festival De Cannes.
Shay Kanot was born in Los Angeles and immigrated to Israel with his family at the age of 3. The family lived in Haifa on the Carmel. When Kanot was 13 years old, the family returned to Los Angeles and he lived in the United States for 3 years. Kanot attended a regional school in Culver City where he took the English as a Second Language track. At school, he befriended classmates, who were mostly Mexican immigrants and refugee children from Vietnam, many of whom belonged to criminal gangs in the area. Culver City was difficult for the naïve Israeli family, who were accustomed to life in Israel. After 3 years, Kanot's mother returned to Israel with her children, while his father remained in Los Angeles and has lived there ever since.
Kanot returned to Haifa. He studied math and physics extensively in high school. Kanot enlisted to the Israeli army, joining a filed unit and later became an officer and achieved the rank of Captain.
During those years, he used to hang out in disco clubs and played professional water polo for Maccabi Haifa. During that time, his parents divorced and his younger sister Tali Kanot was diagnosed with cancer. Tali's illness and death deeply influenced Shay's life and artistic work.
In 1993, Kanot enrolled to Business Administration studies at Tel Aviv University and went on an "after the army" trip to South America. In Brasília, the capital of Brazil, he decided to also enroll for a BA in Film and Television. Kanot returned to Israel after a year and a half of traveling, moved to Tel Aviv and began studying at Tel Aviv University's Steve Tisch School of Film and Television, and at the same time studied Business Administration.
In his second year of studies, after directing several music videos, Kanot approached Yair Dori with an idea for a series about "Behind the scenes" of the Israeli Mossad. Yair Dori, liked the idea and Kanot created in 1996, his first TV series "The Mossad (Ha Mossad)" starring: Gustavo Guillén, the show was a co-production with Argentina, and later sold internationally.
Kanot's first film, "We're Not Like That" (1999), as screenwriter and director, won the Yorkton Award in Canada, and an honorable mention at the New York Film Festival. The film tells a personal experience from Kanot's military service.
From this point Kanot began to work both in television and film. Among his most prominent and well-known works over the years are the films: "Colombian Love" (2004) - starring Mili Avital and Asi Cohen, "Kicking out Shoshana" (2014), "Ibiza" (2015) - starring Dvir Benedek, "Four by Four" (2016) - starring Oshri Cohen and Shlomi Koriat and more.
In television his known Israeli works are: "The Arbitrator" (2007-2014) written by Reshef Levi. Kanot wrote the script for the Israeli known show "Shabatot Vehagim" (2004) along with Eran Kolirin. Kanot directed "Meorav Yerushalmi" (2007) - starring Shmil Ben Ari, "Pushers (Bnei Or)" (2022), "Double (Kefula)" (2015-2019) starring Noa Kirel and more.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Shay Kanot (Hebrew: שי כנות) is an American film and television screenwriter and director, well known in Israel where he mostly lives.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Shay Kanot is considered one of the top directors working today in Israel, known for making the big summer comedies for the cinema and creating series for television that are artistically unique and have global sales. He is known for his creating and directing the four season crime series The Arbitrator (Ha-borer) starring Yehuda Levi and Ania Bukstein. Shay Kanot also directed Gal Gadot in her first and only Israeli movie The Goal (Kicking out Shoshana) sold to Apple TV+. The drama series Shay Kanot directed Pushers (Beni-or) was nominated for best-series in TV Series Festival Berlin. The series Three (Thalathe) he directed was nominated for best-series TV Festival De Cannes.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Shay Kanot was born in Los Angeles and immigrated to Israel with his family at the age of 3. The family lived in Haifa on the Carmel. When Kanot was 13 years old, the family returned to Los Angeles and he lived in the United States for 3 years. Kanot attended a regional school in Culver City where he took the English as a Second Language track. At school, he befriended classmates, who were mostly Mexican immigrants and refugee children from Vietnam, many of whom belonged to criminal gangs in the area. Culver City was difficult for the naïve Israeli family, who were accustomed to life in Israel. After 3 years, Kanot's mother returned to Israel with her children, while his father remained in Los Angeles and has lived there ever since.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Kanot returned to Haifa. He studied math and physics extensively in high school. Kanot enlisted to the Israeli army, joining a filed unit and later became an officer and achieved the rank of Captain.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "During those years, he used to hang out in disco clubs and played professional water polo for Maccabi Haifa. During that time, his parents divorced and his younger sister Tali Kanot was diagnosed with cancer. Tali's illness and death deeply influenced Shay's life and artistic work.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 1993, Kanot enrolled to Business Administration studies at Tel Aviv University and went on an \"after the army\" trip to South America. In Brasília, the capital of Brazil, he decided to also enroll for a BA in Film and Television. Kanot returned to Israel after a year and a half of traveling, moved to Tel Aviv and began studying at Tel Aviv University's Steve Tisch School of Film and Television, and at the same time studied Business Administration.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In his second year of studies, after directing several music videos, Kanot approached Yair Dori with an idea for a series about \"Behind the scenes\" of the Israeli Mossad. Yair Dori, liked the idea and Kanot created in 1996, his first TV series \"The Mossad (Ha Mossad)\" starring: Gustavo Guillén, the show was a co-production with Argentina, and later sold internationally.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Kanot's first film, \"We're Not Like That\" (1999), as screenwriter and director, won the Yorkton Award in Canada, and an honorable mention at the New York Film Festival. The film tells a personal experience from Kanot's military service.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "From this point Kanot began to work both in television and film. Among his most prominent and well-known works over the years are the films: \"Colombian Love\" (2004) - starring Mili Avital and Asi Cohen, \"Kicking out Shoshana\" (2014), \"Ibiza\" (2015) - starring Dvir Benedek, \"Four by Four\" (2016) - starring Oshri Cohen and Shlomi Koriat and more.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In television his known Israeli works are: \"The Arbitrator\" (2007-2014) written by Reshef Levi. Kanot wrote the script for the Israeli known show \"Shabatot Vehagim\" (2004) along with Eran Kolirin. Kanot directed \"Meorav Yerushalmi\" (2007) - starring Shmil Ben Ari, \"Pushers (Bnei Or)\" (2022), \"Double (Kefula)\" (2015-2019) starring Noa Kirel and more.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Shay Kanot is an American film and television screenwriter and director, well known in Israel where he mostly lives. Shay Kanot is considered one of the top directors working today in Israel, known for making the big summer comedies for the cinema and creating series for television that are artistically unique and have global sales. He is known for his creating and directing the four season crime series The Arbitrator (Ha-borer) starring Yehuda Levi and Ania Bukstein. Shay Kanot also directed Gal Gadot in her first and only Israeli movie The Goal sold to Apple TV+. The drama series Shay Kanot directed Pushers (Beni-or) was nominated for best-series in TV Series Festival Berlin. The series Three (Thalathe) he directed was nominated for best-series TV Festival De Cannes.
|
2023-12-13T10:41:37Z
|
2023-12-30T13:38:23Z
|
[
"Template:Article for deletion/dated",
"Template:More citations needed",
"Template:Lang-he",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Imdbname"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shay_Kanot
|
75,552,751 |
Modeste Kerekou
|
Modeste Kerekou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Small and Medium Enterprises and Employment Promotion in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Modeste Kerekou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Small and Medium Enterprises and Employment Promotion in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Modeste Kerekou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Small and Medium Enterprises and Employment Promotion in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:44:34Z
|
2023-12-19T06:16:21Z
|
[
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modeste_Kerekou
|
75,552,757 |
Dona Jean-Claude Houssou
|
Dona Jean-Claude Houssou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Energy in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dona Jean-Claude Houssou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Energy in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Dona Jean-Claude Houssou is a Beninese politician and educator. He is the current Minister of Energy in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. His term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:45:32Z
|
2023-12-19T07:52:05Z
|
[
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dona_Jean-Claude_Houssou
|
75,552,767 |
Alain Sourou Orounla
|
Alain Sourou Orounla is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Communication and Post in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Alain Sourou Orounla is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Communication and Post in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Alain Sourou Orounla is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of Communication and Post in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:47:53Z
|
2023-12-27T08:52:01Z
|
[
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:S-bef",
"Template:S-ttl",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:One source",
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"Template:Benin-politician-stub",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-aft"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alain_Sourou_Orounla
|
75,552,772 |
Fortunet Alain Nouatin
|
Fortunet Alain Nouatin is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of National Defence in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Fortunet Alain Nouatin is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of National Defence in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Fortunet Alain Nouatin is a Beninese politician and educator. She is the current Minister of National Defence in Benin, having been appointed to the position in early 2021 by the current president of Benin, Patrice Talon. Her term began on 25 May 2021.
|
2023-12-13T10:49:51Z
|
2023-12-21T00:29:56Z
|
[
"Template:S-aft",
"Template:S-end",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
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"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-ach",
"Template:Benin-politician-stub",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortunet_Alain_Nouatin
|
75,552,792 |
Min Buri subdistrict
|
Min Buri (Thai: แขวงมีนบุรี, pronounced [kʰwɛ̌ːŋ mīːn būrīː]) is a khwaeng (subdistrict) of Min Buri district, Bangkok, Thailand.
A suburban area at the eastern fringe of Bangkok, it was named by the royal government in 19th century as Min Buri literally "City of Fish", to go with its neighbouring town, Thanyaburi or "City of Grains". The latter is now a district in Pathum Thani province, Thanyaburi.
Min Buri is surrounded by other subdistricts (from the north clockwise): Bang Chan, Sai Kong Din and Sai Kong Din Tai in Khlong Sam Wa district, Saen Saep in its district, Khlong Sam Prawet and Khlong Song Ton Nun in Lat Krabang district, Rat Phatthana in Saphan Sung district and Khan Na Yao in Khan Na Yao district.
As of December 2022, the area had a total population of 95,967 people.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Min Buri (Thai: แขวงมีนบุรี, pronounced [kʰwɛ̌ːŋ mīːn būrīː]) is a khwaeng (subdistrict) of Min Buri district, Bangkok, Thailand.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "A suburban area at the eastern fringe of Bangkok, it was named by the royal government in 19th century as Min Buri literally \"City of Fish\", to go with its neighbouring town, Thanyaburi or \"City of Grains\". The latter is now a district in Pathum Thani province, Thanyaburi.",
"title": "Toponymy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Min Buri is surrounded by other subdistricts (from the north clockwise): Bang Chan, Sai Kong Din and Sai Kong Din Tai in Khlong Sam Wa district, Saen Saep in its district, Khlong Sam Prawet and Khlong Song Ton Nun in Lat Krabang district, Rat Phatthana in Saphan Sung district and Khan Na Yao in Khan Na Yao district.",
"title": "Geography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "As of December 2022, the area had a total population of 95,967 people.",
"title": "Population"
}
] |
Min Buri is a khwaeng (subdistrict) of Min Buri district, Bangkok, Thailand.
|
2023-12-13T10:55:51Z
|
2023-12-25T17:39:41Z
|
[
"Template:Efn",
"Template:Lang-th",
"Template:IPA-th",
"Template:Notelist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Infobox settlement"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Min_Buri_subdistrict
|
75,552,832 |
List of Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Austria
|
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.
Austria ratified the convention on 9 April 2009.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The \"intangible cultural heritage\" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Austria ratified the convention on 9 April 2009.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention. Austria ratified the convention on 9 April 2009.
|
2023-12-13T11:09:06Z
|
2023-12-13T11:09:06Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:World topic",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Legend",
"Template:Efn",
"Template:Notelist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intangible_Cultural_Heritage_elements_in_Austria
|
75,552,906 |
Daddy Issues (TV series)
|
Daddy Issues is an upcoming BBC Three comedy television series created by Danielle Ward. It stars Aimee Lou Wood and David Morrissey.
An odd-couple sitcom in which a pregnant party-girl and her recently divorced father end up in a flat-share in Stockport.
Comedian and writer Danielle Ward has written the six-part series which has Lynn Roberts as producer, while Phil Gilbert is executive producer for Fudge Park Productions. Also executive producing are Aimee Lou Wood, David Morrissey, Ward and Damon Beesley who also directs, alongside Caterine Morshead.
Aimee Lou Wood and David Morrissey were announced in the lead roles Gemma and Malcolm in December 2023. Susan Lynch is set to play the mother of Gemma.
Filming got underway in Manchester in December 2023.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Daddy Issues is an upcoming BBC Three comedy television series created by Danielle Ward. It stars Aimee Lou Wood and David Morrissey.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "An odd-couple sitcom in which a pregnant party-girl and her recently divorced father end up in a flat-share in Stockport.",
"title": "Synopsis"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Comedian and writer Danielle Ward has written the six-part series which has Lynn Roberts as producer, while Phil Gilbert is executive producer for Fudge Park Productions. Also executive producing are Aimee Lou Wood, David Morrissey, Ward and Damon Beesley who also directs, alongside Caterine Morshead.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Aimee Lou Wood and David Morrissey were announced in the lead roles Gemma and Malcolm in December 2023. Susan Lynch is set to play the mother of Gemma.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Filming got underway in Manchester in December 2023.",
"title": "Production"
}
] |
Daddy Issues is an upcoming BBC Three comedy television series created by Danielle Ward. It stars Aimee Lou Wood and David Morrissey.
|
2023-12-13T11:30:23Z
|
2023-12-16T13:54:58Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
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"Template:Use British English",
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daddy_Issues_(TV_series)
|
75,552,930 |
Yuri Stupel
|
Yuri Stupel (born December 26, 1953, in Sofia, Bulgaria) is a Bulgarian composer and performer, renowned for his extensive work in theater music. He has been living and working in Greece for over two decades, contributing significantly to the cultural exchanges between Bulgaria and Greece.
Stupel is the son of respected composer Petar Stupel. His mother, Lidia, is an opera singer known for her chamber performances. He began his musical journey at an early age, taking piano lessons and trying his hand at composing when he was just six years old. Stupel graduated from the Academy of Music, Dance and Fine Arts in Plovdiv, Bulgaria.
In the 1970s, Stupel formed the band Association with his friends Haygashot Agasyan, Kristian Boyadzhiev, and Georgi Denkov. He gained recognition as a pop music songwriter, winning awards for his compositions in the 1970s. Stupel is also known for composing scores for over 250 TV serials, theater, and puppet productions, some of which won national and international prizes.
Stupel's work in Greece includes translating and staging two plays by his friend and collaborator Stefan Tsanev, "The Last Night of Socrates" and "The True Death of Jeanne d'Arc". He has also created his own musical for children titled "The Violinist of the Sea".
Stupel has composed music for more than 350 theatrical productions. He believes in closely following the director's vision, ensuring that the music complements the overall production. His approach to composing for theater is to create a unified piece where the music does not overshadow other elements of the production.
Recently, Stupel has been involved in projects such as a one-man play dedicated to the life of ballet dancer Isadora Duncan, where he participates as a pianist. His compositions have been featured in various Greek festivals, with the Epidaurus Festival making a significant impression on him.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Yuri Stupel (born December 26, 1953, in Sofia, Bulgaria) is a Bulgarian composer and performer, renowned for his extensive work in theater music. He has been living and working in Greece for over two decades, contributing significantly to the cultural exchanges between Bulgaria and Greece.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Stupel is the son of respected composer Petar Stupel. His mother, Lidia, is an opera singer known for her chamber performances. He began his musical journey at an early age, taking piano lessons and trying his hand at composing when he was just six years old. Stupel graduated from the Academy of Music, Dance and Fine Arts in Plovdiv, Bulgaria.",
"title": "Early Life and Education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In the 1970s, Stupel formed the band Association with his friends Haygashot Agasyan, Kristian Boyadzhiev, and Georgi Denkov. He gained recognition as a pop music songwriter, winning awards for his compositions in the 1970s. Stupel is also known for composing scores for over 250 TV serials, theater, and puppet productions, some of which won national and international prizes.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Stupel's work in Greece includes translating and staging two plays by his friend and collaborator Stefan Tsanev, \"The Last Night of Socrates\" and \"The True Death of Jeanne d'Arc\". He has also created his own musical for children titled \"The Violinist of the Sea\".",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Stupel has composed music for more than 350 theatrical productions. He believes in closely following the director's vision, ensuring that the music complements the overall production. His approach to composing for theater is to create a unified piece where the music does not overshadow other elements of the production.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Recently, Stupel has been involved in projects such as a one-man play dedicated to the life of ballet dancer Isadora Duncan, where he participates as a pianist. His compositions have been featured in various Greek festivals, with the Epidaurus Festival making a significant impression on him.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Yuri Stupel is a Bulgarian composer and performer, renowned for his extensive work in theater music. He has been living and working in Greece for over two decades, contributing significantly to the cultural exchanges between Bulgaria and Greece.
|
2023-12-13T11:36:25Z
|
2023-12-14T10:17:58Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuri_Stupel
|
75,552,931 |
List of Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Pakistan
|
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.
Pakistan ratified the convention on 7 October 2005.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The \"intangible cultural heritage\" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Pakistan ratified the convention on 7 October 2005.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) intangible cultural heritage elements are the non-physical traditions and practices performed by a people. As part of a country's cultural heritage, they include celebrations, festivals, performances, oral traditions, music, and the making of handicrafts. The "intangible cultural heritage" is defined by the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, drafted in 2003 and took effect in 2006. Inscription of new heritage elements on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists is determined by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, an organisation established by the convention. Pakistan ratified the convention on 7 October 2005.
|
2023-12-13T11:36:56Z
|
2023-12-13T11:49:07Z
|
[
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intangible_Cultural_Heritage_elements_in_Pakistan
|
75,552,936 |
Secret Mountain
|
Secret Mountain is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It told "The story of a group of people snowbound In a tiny chalet in the heart of the Austrian Tyrol, under the shadow of a towering peak."
It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written and produced by West.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Secret Mountain is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It told \"The story of a group of people snowbound In a tiny chalet in the heart of the Austrian Tyrol, under the shadow of a towering peak.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written and produced by West.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Secret Mountain is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It told "The story of a group of people snowbound In a tiny chalet in the heart of the Austrian Tyrol, under the shadow of a towering peak." It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written and produced by West.
|
2023-12-13T11:37:37Z
|
2023-12-13T12:28:54Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Mountain
|
75,552,939 |
Sabian–Mandaean Mandi of Baghdad
|
The Sabian–Mandaean Mandi of Baghdad (Arabic: مندي الصابئة المندائية) is a Mandaean temple in the Al-Qadisiyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. It is located on the banks of the Tigris River. Rishama Sattar Jabbar Hilo is the official head of the mandi.
In the early 1980s, the mandi was built on land originally owned by the Iraqi Ministry of Finance that was allocated to the Mandaean community, with an area of approximately 1,200 square metres. It has ritual halls and a guesthouse to receive and accommodate visitors.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Sabian–Mandaean Mandi of Baghdad (Arabic: مندي الصابئة المندائية) is a Mandaean temple in the Al-Qadisiyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. It is located on the banks of the Tigris River. Rishama Sattar Jabbar Hilo is the official head of the mandi.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In the early 1980s, the mandi was built on land originally owned by the Iraqi Ministry of Finance that was allocated to the Mandaean community, with an area of approximately 1,200 square metres. It has ritual halls and a guesthouse to receive and accommodate visitors.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Sabian–Mandaean Mandi of Baghdad is a Mandaean temple in the Al-Qadisiyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. It is located on the banks of the Tigris River. Rishama Sattar Jabbar Hilo is the official head of the mandi. In the early 1980s, the mandi was built on land originally owned by the Iraqi Ministry of Finance that was allocated to the Mandaean community, with an area of approximately 1,200 square metres. It has ritual halls and a guesthouse to receive and accommodate visitors.
|
2023-12-13T11:38:28Z
|
2023-12-14T13:47:24Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox religious building",
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"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Mandaeism footer",
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"Template:Iraq-struct-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabian%E2%80%93Mandaean_Mandi_of_Baghdad
|
75,552,943 |
White Marriage (radio serial)
|
White Marriage is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West.
It concerned a British man who marries a German girl so she can get British citizenship.
The serial was based on research West did in Germany. According to ABC Weekly it "created a stir in the listening world".
The Brisbane Mail praised the "capable cast".
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "White Marriage is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It concerned a British man who marries a German girl so she can get British citizenship.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The serial was based on research West did in Germany. According to ABC Weekly it \"created a stir in the listening world\".",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Brisbane Mail praised the \"capable cast\".",
"title": ""
}
] |
White Marriage is a 1951 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It concerned a British man who marries a German girl so she can get British citizenship. The serial was based on research West did in Germany. According to ABC Weekly it "created a stir in the listening world". The Brisbane Mail praised the "capable cast".
|
2023-12-13T11:39:51Z
|
2023-12-16T12:19:03Z
|
[
"Template:Citation",
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"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Marriage_(radio_serial)
|
75,552,949 |
History of cataract surgery
|
Cataract surgery has a long history in Europe, Asia, and Africa. It is one of the most common and successful surgical procedures in worldwide use, thanks to improvements in techniques for cataract removal and developments in intraocular lens replacement technology, in implantation techniques, and in IOL design, construction, and selection. Surgical techniques that have contributed to this success include microsurgery, viscoelastics, and phacoemulsification.
Couching was the original form of cataract surgery, and was used from antiquity. It is still occasionally found in traditional medicine in parts of Africa and Asia. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule, equivalent to what became known as intracapsular cataract extraction. The lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision.
In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic in 1884.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL), which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.
Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe.
In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard.
Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation.
In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser (Nd:YAG laser) for posterior capsulotomy. In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel foldable lenses, making it possible to reduce the incision width.
In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm (0.26 to 0.28 in) straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports.
In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture, and in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that reduced induced astigmatism.
In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called "double-nylon loop", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in), and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.
Couching is the earliest-documented form of cataract surgery, and one of the oldest surgical procedures ever performed. In this technique, the lens is dislodged and pushed aside into the vitreous cavity, but not removed from the eye, thus removing the opacity from the visual axis, but also the ability to focus. After being used regularly for centuries, couching has been mostly abandoned in favor of more effective techniques, due to its generally poor outcomes, and is currently only routinely practiced in remote areas of developing countries.
Cataract surgery was first mentioned in the Babylonian code of Hammurabi 1750 BCE. The earliest known depiction of cataract surgery is on a statue from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt (2467–2457 BCE). According to Francisco J Ascaso et al, a "relief painting from tomb number TT 217 in a worker settlement in Deir el-Medina" shows "the man buried in the tomb, Ipuy ... one of the builders of royal tombs in the renowned Valley of the Kings, circa 1279–1213 BC" as he underwent cataract surgery. Although direct evidence for cataract surgery in ancient Egypt is lacking, the indirect evidence, including surgical instruments that could have been used for the procedure, show that it was possible. It is assumed that the couching technique was used.
Couching was practiced in ancient India and subsequently introduced to other countries by Indian physician Sushruta (c. 6th century BCE), who described it in his medical text, Sushruta Samhita ("Compendium of Sushruta"); the work's Uttaratantra section describes an operation in which a curved needle was used to push the opaque "phlegmatic matter" in the eye out of the way of vision. The phlegm was then said to be blown out of the nose. The eye would later be soaked with warm, clarified butter before being bandaged. The removal of cataracts by surgery was introduced into China from India, and flourished in the Sui (581–618 CE) and Tang (618–907 CE) dynasties.
The first references to cataract and its treatment in Europe are found in 29 CE in De Medicina, a medical treatise by Latin encyclopedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus, which describes a couching operation. In 2nd century CE, Galen of Pergamon, a prominent Greek physician, surgeon, and philosopher, reportedly performed an operation to remove a cataract-affected lens using a needle-shaped instrument. Although many 20th-century historians have claimed that Galen believed the lens to be in the exact centre of the eye, there is evidence that he understood the crystalline lens is located in the anterior aspect of the eye.
The removal of cataracts by couching was a common surgical procedure in Djenné and many other parts of Africa. Couching continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages, and is still used to this day in some parts of Africa and in Yemen. However, it has been proven to be an ineffective and dangerous method of cataract therapy, which often leads to blindness or only partially restored vision. The technique has mostly been replaced by extracapsular cataract surgery, including phacoemulsification.
The lens can also be removed by suction through a hollow instrument: bronze oral-suction instruments that seem to have been used for this method of cataract extraction during the 2nd century CE have been unearthed. Such a procedure was described by the 10th-century Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, who attributed it to Antyllus, a 2nd-century Greek physician. According to al-Razi, the procedure "required a large incision in the eye, a hollow needle, and an assistant with an extraordinary lung capacity". This suction procedure was also described by Iraqi ophthalmologist Ammar Al-Mawsili in his 10th-century medical text, Choice of Eye Diseases. He presented case histories of its usage, while claiming to have successfully performed it on a number of patients. Extracting the lens has the benefit of removing the possibility of the lens migrating back into the field of vision. According to oculist Al-Shādhili, a later variant of the cataract needle in 14th-century Egypt used a screw to grip the lens. It is not clear how often, if ever, this method was used; other writers, including Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi and Al-Shadhili, appear to have been unfamiliar with this procedure, or claimed it was ineffective.
On Sep. 18, 1750, Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on a cleric in Cologne. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule: the lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision. In America, cataract couching may have been performed in 1611, while cataract extraction was most likely performed by 1776. Cataract extraction by aspiration of lens material through a tube using suction was performed by Philadelphia-based surgeon Philip Syng Physick in 1815.
King Serfoji II, Bhonsle of Thanjavur, India, reportedly performed cataract surgeries in the early 1800s, according to manuscripts stored in the Saraswathi Mahal Library.
In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic; the news of his discovery spread rapidly, but was not without controversy.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). The work of Henry Smith, who first developed a safe, fast way to remove the lens within its capsule by external manipulation, was considered particularly influential; the capsule forceps, the discovery of enzymatic zonulysis by Joaquin Barraquer in 1957, and the introduction of cryoextraction of the lens by Tadeusz Krwawicz and Charles Kelman in 1961 continued the development of ICCE. Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s: it consisted in using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe. This required a large incision and the cornea to be folded back and the anterior chamber to be drained.
In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL) which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.
Artificial IOLs, which are used to replace the eye's natural lens removed during cataract surgery, increased in popularity since the 1960s, and were first approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1981. The development of IOLs was considered a notable innovation, as patients previously had to wear very thick glasses, or a special type of contact lens, in order to cope with the removal of their natural lens. IOLs can be used to correct other vision problems, such as toric lenses for correcting astigmatism. IOLs can be classified as monofocal, toric, and multifocal lenses.
Ocular anaesthesia has improved since Alfred Einhorn synthesised procaine in 1905, which was used in retrobulbar anaesthesia.
Peribulbar anaesthesia was introduced in 1980 by Mandal and David. Since the turn of the millennium, sub-Tenon's anaesthesia hascome into common use, and by ising a blunt cannula to deliver local anaesthetic, the risk of accidentally puncturing the globe is reduced. The more recent tendency is to administer topical local anesthesia without use of a needle.
Also in the 1960s, the development of A-scan ultrasound biometry contributed to provide more accurate predictions of implant refractive strength.
In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard. Patients who undergo cataract surgery rarely complain of pain or discomfort during the procedure, although those who have topical anaesthesia, rather than peribulbar block anaesthesia, may experience some discomfort.
Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation.
In 1980, D.M. Colvard made the cataract incision in the sclera, which limited induced astigmatism. In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser (Nd:YAG laser) for posterior capsulotomy. In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel lenses.
According to Cionni et al (2006), Kimiya Shimizu began removing cataracts using topical anaesthesia in the late 1980s, though Davis (2016) attributes the introduction of topical anaesthetics to R.A. Fischman in 1993. In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm (0.26 to 0.28 in) straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports.
In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture; in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that minimized the risk of induced astigmatism; in 1991, J.A. Singer described the frown incision, in which the ends curve away from the limbus, similarly reducing astigmatism. Toric IOLs were introduced in 1992 and are used worldwide to correct corneal astigmatism during cataract surgery; they have been approved by the FDA since 1998. Also in the late 1990s, optical biometry based on partial coherence infrared interferometry was introduced: this technique improves visual resolution, offers much greater precision, and is much quicker and more comfortable than ultrasound.
According to surveys of members of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, approximately 2.85 million cataract procedures were performed in the United States throughout 2004, while 2.79 million operations were executed in 2005. In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called "double-nylon loop", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in), and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.
As of 2013, medical staffs had access to instruments that use infrared swept-source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT), a non-invasive, high-speed method that can penetrate dense cataracts and collects thousands of scans per second, with the ultimate goal of generating high-resolution data in 2D or 3D. As of 2021, approximately four million cataract procedures take place annually in the U.S. and nearly 28 million worldwide, a large proportion of which are performed in India; that is about 75,000 procedures per day globally.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Cataract surgery has a long history in Europe, Asia, and Africa. It is one of the most common and successful surgical procedures in worldwide use, thanks to improvements in techniques for cataract removal and developments in intraocular lens replacement technology, in implantation techniques, and in IOL design, construction, and selection. Surgical techniques that have contributed to this success include microsurgery, viscoelastics, and phacoemulsification.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Couching was the original form of cataract surgery, and was used from antiquity. It is still occasionally found in traditional medicine in parts of Africa and Asia. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule, equivalent to what became known as intracapsular cataract extraction. The lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic in 1884.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL), which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser (Nd:YAG laser) for posterior capsulotomy. In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel foldable lenses, making it possible to reduce the incision width.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm (0.26 to 0.28 in) straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture, and in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that reduced induced astigmatism.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called \"double-nylon loop\", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in), and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Couching is the earliest-documented form of cataract surgery, and one of the oldest surgical procedures ever performed. In this technique, the lens is dislodged and pushed aside into the vitreous cavity, but not removed from the eye, thus removing the opacity from the visual axis, but also the ability to focus. After being used regularly for centuries, couching has been mostly abandoned in favor of more effective techniques, due to its generally poor outcomes, and is currently only routinely practiced in remote areas of developing countries.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Cataract surgery was first mentioned in the Babylonian code of Hammurabi 1750 BCE. The earliest known depiction of cataract surgery is on a statue from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt (2467–2457 BCE). According to Francisco J Ascaso et al, a \"relief painting from tomb number TT 217 in a worker settlement in Deir el-Medina\" shows \"the man buried in the tomb, Ipuy ... one of the builders of royal tombs in the renowned Valley of the Kings, circa 1279–1213 BC\" as he underwent cataract surgery. Although direct evidence for cataract surgery in ancient Egypt is lacking, the indirect evidence, including surgical instruments that could have been used for the procedure, show that it was possible. It is assumed that the couching technique was used.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "Couching was practiced in ancient India and subsequently introduced to other countries by Indian physician Sushruta (c. 6th century BCE), who described it in his medical text, Sushruta Samhita (\"Compendium of Sushruta\"); the work's Uttaratantra section describes an operation in which a curved needle was used to push the opaque \"phlegmatic matter\" in the eye out of the way of vision. The phlegm was then said to be blown out of the nose. The eye would later be soaked with warm, clarified butter before being bandaged. The removal of cataracts by surgery was introduced into China from India, and flourished in the Sui (581–618 CE) and Tang (618–907 CE) dynasties.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "The first references to cataract and its treatment in Europe are found in 29 CE in De Medicina, a medical treatise by Latin encyclopedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus, which describes a couching operation. In 2nd century CE, Galen of Pergamon, a prominent Greek physician, surgeon, and philosopher, reportedly performed an operation to remove a cataract-affected lens using a needle-shaped instrument. Although many 20th-century historians have claimed that Galen believed the lens to be in the exact centre of the eye, there is evidence that he understood the crystalline lens is located in the anterior aspect of the eye.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "The removal of cataracts by couching was a common surgical procedure in Djenné and many other parts of Africa. Couching continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages, and is still used to this day in some parts of Africa and in Yemen. However, it has been proven to be an ineffective and dangerous method of cataract therapy, which often leads to blindness or only partially restored vision. The technique has mostly been replaced by extracapsular cataract surgery, including phacoemulsification.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "The lens can also be removed by suction through a hollow instrument: bronze oral-suction instruments that seem to have been used for this method of cataract extraction during the 2nd century CE have been unearthed. Such a procedure was described by the 10th-century Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, who attributed it to Antyllus, a 2nd-century Greek physician. According to al-Razi, the procedure \"required a large incision in the eye, a hollow needle, and an assistant with an extraordinary lung capacity\". This suction procedure was also described by Iraqi ophthalmologist Ammar Al-Mawsili in his 10th-century medical text, Choice of Eye Diseases. He presented case histories of its usage, while claiming to have successfully performed it on a number of patients. Extracting the lens has the benefit of removing the possibility of the lens migrating back into the field of vision. According to oculist Al-Shādhili, a later variant of the cataract needle in 14th-century Egypt used a screw to grip the lens. It is not clear how often, if ever, this method was used; other writers, including Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi and Al-Shadhili, appear to have been unfamiliar with this procedure, or claimed it was ineffective.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "On Sep. 18, 1750, Jacques Daviel performed the first documented planned primary cataract extraction on a cleric in Cologne. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule: the lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision. In America, cataract couching may have been performed in 1611, while cataract extraction was most likely performed by 1776. Cataract extraction by aspiration of lens material through a tube using suction was performed by Philadelphia-based surgeon Philip Syng Physick in 1815.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "King Serfoji II, Bhonsle of Thanjavur, India, reportedly performed cataract surgeries in the early 1800s, according to manuscripts stored in the Saraswathi Mahal Library.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic; the news of his discovery spread rapidly, but was not without controversy.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). The work of Henry Smith, who first developed a safe, fast way to remove the lens within its capsule by external manipulation, was considered particularly influential; the capsule forceps, the discovery of enzymatic zonulysis by Joaquin Barraquer in 1957, and the introduction of cryoextraction of the lens by Tadeusz Krwawicz and Charles Kelman in 1961 continued the development of ICCE. Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s: it consisted in using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe. This required a large incision and the cornea to be folded back and the anterior chamber to be drained.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL) which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "Artificial IOLs, which are used to replace the eye's natural lens removed during cataract surgery, increased in popularity since the 1960s, and were first approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1981. The development of IOLs was considered a notable innovation, as patients previously had to wear very thick glasses, or a special type of contact lens, in order to cope with the removal of their natural lens. IOLs can be used to correct other vision problems, such as toric lenses for correcting astigmatism. IOLs can be classified as monofocal, toric, and multifocal lenses.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 23,
"text": "Ocular anaesthesia has improved since Alfred Einhorn synthesised procaine in 1905, which was used in retrobulbar anaesthesia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 24,
"text": "Peribulbar anaesthesia was introduced in 1980 by Mandal and David. Since the turn of the millennium, sub-Tenon's anaesthesia hascome into common use, and by ising a blunt cannula to deliver local anaesthetic, the risk of accidentally puncturing the globe is reduced. The more recent tendency is to administer topical local anesthesia without use of a needle.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 25,
"text": "Also in the 1960s, the development of A-scan ultrasound biometry contributed to provide more accurate predictions of implant refractive strength.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 26,
"text": "In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard. Patients who undergo cataract surgery rarely complain of pain or discomfort during the procedure, although those who have topical anaesthesia, rather than peribulbar block anaesthesia, may experience some discomfort.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 27,
"text": "Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 28,
"text": "In 1980, D.M. Colvard made the cataract incision in the sclera, which limited induced astigmatism. In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser (Nd:YAG laser) for posterior capsulotomy. In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel lenses.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 29,
"text": "According to Cionni et al (2006), Kimiya Shimizu began removing cataracts using topical anaesthesia in the late 1980s, though Davis (2016) attributes the introduction of topical anaesthetics to R.A. Fischman in 1993. In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm (0.26 to 0.28 in) straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 30,
"text": "In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture; in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that minimized the risk of induced astigmatism; in 1991, J.A. Singer described the frown incision, in which the ends curve away from the limbus, similarly reducing astigmatism. Toric IOLs were introduced in 1992 and are used worldwide to correct corneal astigmatism during cataract surgery; they have been approved by the FDA since 1998. Also in the late 1990s, optical biometry based on partial coherence infrared interferometry was introduced: this technique improves visual resolution, offers much greater precision, and is much quicker and more comfortable than ultrasound.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 31,
"text": "According to surveys of members of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, approximately 2.85 million cataract procedures were performed in the United States throughout 2004, while 2.79 million operations were executed in 2005. In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called \"double-nylon loop\", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in), and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 32,
"text": "As of 2013, medical staffs had access to instruments that use infrared swept-source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT), a non-invasive, high-speed method that can penetrate dense cataracts and collects thousands of scans per second, with the ultimate goal of generating high-resolution data in 2D or 3D. As of 2021, approximately four million cataract procedures take place annually in the U.S. and nearly 28 million worldwide, a large proportion of which are performed in India; that is about 75,000 procedures per day globally.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Cataract surgery has a long history in Europe, Asia, and Africa. It is one of the most common and successful surgical procedures in worldwide use, thanks to improvements in techniques for cataract removal and developments in intraocular lens replacement technology, in implantation techniques, and in IOL design, construction, and selection. Surgical techniques that have contributed to this success include microsurgery, viscoelastics, and phacoemulsification. Couching was the original form of cataract surgery, and was used from antiquity. It is still occasionally found in traditional medicine in parts of Africa and Asia. In 1753, Samuel Sharp performed the first-recorded surgical removal of the entire lens and lens capsule, equivalent to what became known as intracapsular cataract extraction. The lens was removed from the eye through a limbal incision. In 1884, Karl Koller became the first surgeon to apply a cocaine solution to the cornea as a local anaesthetic in 1884. At the beginning of the 20th century, the standard surgical procedure was intracapsular cataract extraction (ICCE). In 1949, Harold Ridley introduced the concept of implantation of the intraocular lens (IOL), which made visual rehabilitation after cataract surgery a more efficient, effective, and comfortable process. Intracapsular cryoextraction was the favoured form of cataract extraction from the late 1960s to the early 1980s using a liquid-nitrogen-cooled probe tip to freeze the encapsulated lens to the probe. In 1967, Charles Kelman introduced phacoemulsification, which uses ultrasonic energy to emulsify the nucleus of the crystalline lens and remove cataracts by aspiration without a large incision. This method of surgery reduced the need for an extended hospital stay and made out-patient surgery the standard. Ophthalmic viscosurgical devices (OVDs), which were introduced in 1972, facilitate the procedure and improve overall safety. An OVD is a viscoelastic solution, a gel-like substance used to maintain the shape of the eye at reduced pressure, as well as protect the inside structure and tissues of the eye without interfering with the operation. In the early 1980s, Danièle Aron-Rosa and colleagues introduced the neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet laser for posterior capsulotomy. In 1985, Thomas Mazzocco developed and implanted the first foldable IOL. Graham Barrett and associates pioneered the use of silicone, acrylic, and hydrogel foldable lenses, making it possible to reduce the incision width. In 1987, Blumenthal and Moissiev described the use of a reduced incision size for ECCE. They used a 6.5 to 7 mm straight scleral tunnel incision 2 mm (0.079 in) behind the limbus with two side ports. In 1989, M. McFarland introduced a self-sealing incision architecture, and in 1990, S.L.Pallin described a chevron-shaped incision that reduced induced astigmatism. In 2009, Praputsorn Kosakarn described a method for manual fragmentation of the lens, called "double-nylon loop", which consists in splitting the lens into three pieces for extraction, allowing a smaller, sutureless incision of 4.0 to 5.0 mm, and requires implantation of a foldable IOL. This technique uses less expensive instruments and is suitable for use in developing countries.
|
2023-12-13T11:42:27Z
|
2023-12-15T16:37:39Z
|
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cataract_surgery
|
75,552,950 |
Jenga Jirani
|
Jenga Jirani is an initiative by the Jonathan Jackson Foundation to mobilize resources to aid vulnerable families in the informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya.
In the year 2020, Jenga Jirani targeted to raise Kshs 100 million in collaboration with AfricaCentric Entertainment, and a long list of Kenyan celebrity musicians to help the vulnerable in the society affected by the novel covid-19 coronavirus. It included distributing food, sanitary products, and sharing care.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Jenga Jirani is an initiative by the Jonathan Jackson Foundation to mobilize resources to aid vulnerable families in the informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In the year 2020, Jenga Jirani targeted to raise Kshs 100 million in collaboration with AfricaCentric Entertainment, and a long list of Kenyan celebrity musicians to help the vulnerable in the society affected by the novel covid-19 coronavirus. It included distributing food, sanitary products, and sharing care.",
"title": "History"
}
] |
Jenga Jirani is an initiative by the Jonathan Jackson Foundation to mobilize resources to aid vulnerable families in the informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya.
|
2023-12-13T11:42:31Z
|
2023-12-16T08:36:07Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox organization",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Official website"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenga_Jirani
|
75,552,956 |
John Bowen Elcum
|
John Bowen Elcum (18 November 1860 – 28 November 1946) was a British colonial administrator. He was Director of Education for the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States from 1906 to 1916.
Elcum was born on 18 November 1860, son of Hugh William Elcum, solicitor, and was educated at Highgate School, London, and Queen's College, Oxford.
In 1884, he enrolled as a cadet in the Straits Settlements, and was appointed Acting District Officer in South Malacca, Province Wellesley and Dindings having passed the Malay language examination. In 1892, he was District Officer in Bukit Mertajam and the following year was appointed Sheriff in Penang.
In 1893, he moved to Singapore where he was took up various positions including Acting Sheriff, Acting Collector of Land Revenue, Inspector of Prisons, and Official Assignee and Registrar of Deeds.
In 1898, he began working in the education sector, where he would remain for the rest of his career, beginning with an appointment as Inspector of Schools for the Straits Settlements, which title was changed to Director of Public Instruction in 1901. In 1906, the Education Departments of the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States were amalgamated and Elcum was appointed to head the new department where he remained as Director of Education until his retirement.
Briefly, from 1911–12, he combined his position as Director with that of Acting Advisor to the Sultan of Johor in the absence of Douglas Graham Campbell, and in 1914, he was appointed as a member of the Singapore Legislative Council. He retired in 1916 due to illness.
As Director of Education for ten years, his reports, which were published annually, provide an authoritative account of the state of education in British Malaya at the beginning of the 20th century. A recurring issue which he raised in his reports was the poor state of women's education amongst the Chinese, and especially the Malays. In his report for 1913, he noted that school attendance by boys was on average five times greater than for girls. He added: "The girls' schools continue to be unsatisfactory. They are small and inefficient and as a rule girls only attend for a year or so, and indeed very few reach the upper classes."
Elcum's wife, Ethel Harriet, died in 1914, and they had three daughters, Jane, Eunice and Gwen. Elcum died on 28 November 1946, aged 85, at Truro, Cornwall.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "John Bowen Elcum (18 November 1860 – 28 November 1946) was a British colonial administrator. He was Director of Education for the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States from 1906 to 1916.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Elcum was born on 18 November 1860, son of Hugh William Elcum, solicitor, and was educated at Highgate School, London, and Queen's College, Oxford.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1884, he enrolled as a cadet in the Straits Settlements, and was appointed Acting District Officer in South Malacca, Province Wellesley and Dindings having passed the Malay language examination. In 1892, he was District Officer in Bukit Mertajam and the following year was appointed Sheriff in Penang.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1893, he moved to Singapore where he was took up various positions including Acting Sheriff, Acting Collector of Land Revenue, Inspector of Prisons, and Official Assignee and Registrar of Deeds.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 1898, he began working in the education sector, where he would remain for the rest of his career, beginning with an appointment as Inspector of Schools for the Straits Settlements, which title was changed to Director of Public Instruction in 1901. In 1906, the Education Departments of the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States were amalgamated and Elcum was appointed to head the new department where he remained as Director of Education until his retirement.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Briefly, from 1911–12, he combined his position as Director with that of Acting Advisor to the Sultan of Johor in the absence of Douglas Graham Campbell, and in 1914, he was appointed as a member of the Singapore Legislative Council. He retired in 1916 due to illness.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "As Director of Education for ten years, his reports, which were published annually, provide an authoritative account of the state of education in British Malaya at the beginning of the 20th century. A recurring issue which he raised in his reports was the poor state of women's education amongst the Chinese, and especially the Malays. In his report for 1913, he noted that school attendance by boys was on average five times greater than for girls. He added: \"The girls' schools continue to be unsatisfactory. They are small and inefficient and as a rule girls only attend for a year or so, and indeed very few reach the upper classes.\"",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Elcum's wife, Ethel Harriet, died in 1914, and they had three daughters, Jane, Eunice and Gwen. Elcum died on 28 November 1946, aged 85, at Truro, Cornwall.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] |
John Bowen Elcum was a British colonial administrator. He was Director of Education for the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States from 1906 to 1916.
|
2023-12-13T11:45:28Z
|
2023-12-29T22:11:53Z
|
[
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bowen_Elcum
|
75,552,961 |
Polymarket
|
Polymarket is a decentralized information markets platform that lets people trade real-money markets on the outcomes of the most-highly debated current events, and follow the odds to garner accurate insights about the future. Users buy or sell Outcome Shares, which can be redeemed for $1 if the outcome is resolved as correct, and become worthless if it’s incorrect. Owners of outcome shares are never locked in and can sell their position at any time. The goal is, by harnessing the power of free markets, Polymarket can aggregate collective knowledge and provide the general public with an unbiased source of truth in regards to the likelihood of certain significant events happening in the future.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Polymarket is a decentralized information markets platform that lets people trade real-money markets on the outcomes of the most-highly debated current events, and follow the odds to garner accurate insights about the future. Users buy or sell Outcome Shares, which can be redeemed for $1 if the outcome is resolved as correct, and become worthless if it’s incorrect. Owners of outcome shares are never locked in and can sell their position at any time. The goal is, by harnessing the power of free markets, Polymarket can aggregate collective knowledge and provide the general public with an unbiased source of truth in regards to the likelihood of certain significant events happening in the future.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Polymarket is a decentralized information markets platform that lets people trade real-money markets on the outcomes of the most-highly debated current events, and follow the odds to garner accurate insights about the future. Users buy or sell Outcome Shares, which can be redeemed for $1 if the outcome is resolved as correct, and become worthless if it’s incorrect. Owners of outcome shares are never locked in and can sell their position at any time. The goal is, by harnessing the power of free markets, Polymarket can aggregate collective knowledge and provide the general public with an unbiased source of truth in regards to the likelihood of certain significant events happening in the future.
|
2023-12-13T11:46:37Z
|
2023-12-14T10:28:19Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymarket
|
75,552,978 |
Tremella erythrina
|
Tremella erythrina is a species of fungus in the family Tremellaceae. It produces orange to red, lobate to foliaceous, gelatinous basidiocarps (fruit bodies) and is parasitic on other fungi on wood of broad-leaved trees. It was originally described from China.
Tremella erythrina was first published in 2019 by Chinese mycologists Xin-Zhan Liu and Feng-Yan Bai based on collections made in Guangxi Province, China. The species is considered to be close to Tremella mesenterica, the type species of the genus, and hence belongs in Tremella sensu stricto.
Fruit bodies are gelatinous, red to brownish orange, up to 18 mm across, cerebriform (brain-like) to foliaceous, with undulating, hollow lobes. Microscopically, the basidia are tremelloid (globose to broadly ellipsoid, with oblique to vertical septa), 4-celled, 12 to 18 by 13 to 19 μm. The basidiospores are ellipsoid, smooth, 7 to 10 by 5 to 7 μm.
Tremella dysenterica and T. rubromaculata are similarly coloured, but were described from Brazil and Guatemala respectively. Tremella samoensis, described from Samoa, and T. flammea, described from Japan, are also similar in colour, but differ microscopically.
Tremella erythrina is a parasite on lignicolous fungi, but its host is unknown. It was originally described from wood of a deciduous tree.
The species is currently only known from China.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Tremella erythrina is a species of fungus in the family Tremellaceae. It produces orange to red, lobate to foliaceous, gelatinous basidiocarps (fruit bodies) and is parasitic on other fungi on wood of broad-leaved trees. It was originally described from China.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Tremella erythrina was first published in 2019 by Chinese mycologists Xin-Zhan Liu and Feng-Yan Bai based on collections made in Guangxi Province, China. The species is considered to be close to Tremella mesenterica, the type species of the genus, and hence belongs in Tremella sensu stricto.",
"title": "Taxonomy"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Fruit bodies are gelatinous, red to brownish orange, up to 18 mm across, cerebriform (brain-like) to foliaceous, with undulating, hollow lobes. Microscopically, the basidia are tremelloid (globose to broadly ellipsoid, with oblique to vertical septa), 4-celled, 12 to 18 by 13 to 19 μm. The basidiospores are ellipsoid, smooth, 7 to 10 by 5 to 7 μm.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Tremella dysenterica and T. rubromaculata are similarly coloured, but were described from Brazil and Guatemala respectively. Tremella samoensis, described from Samoa, and T. flammea, described from Japan, are also similar in colour, but differ microscopically.",
"title": "Similar species"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Tremella erythrina is a parasite on lignicolous fungi, but its host is unknown. It was originally described from wood of a deciduous tree.",
"title": "Habitat and distribution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The species is currently only known from China.",
"title": "Habitat and distribution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Tremella erythrina is a species of fungus in the family Tremellaceae. It produces orange to red, lobate to foliaceous, gelatinous basidiocarps and is parasitic on other fungi on wood of broad-leaved trees. It was originally described from China.
|
2023-12-13T11:50:28Z
|
2023-12-13T11:50:28Z
|
[
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tremella_erythrina
|
75,552,986 |
Police and Firemen (War Service) Act 1939
|
The Police and Firemen (War Service) Act was an Act passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom soon after the outbreak of the Second World War. It was mainly concerned with pensions for those leaving the UK's fire services and police forces to serve in the armed forces (section 1-5), including those in the army and navy reserves (section 6) but excluding those in the London Fire Brigade (section 7). It also clarified such matters regarding probationers and those in training on leave (sections 8 and 13) and that those injured on war service would have that injury counted as non-accidental injuries (section 11), but that nobody leaving the force to join the armed services needed to re-attest (section 9). It also made different provisions for chief officers (section 10).
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Police and Firemen (War Service) Act was an Act passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom soon after the outbreak of the Second World War. It was mainly concerned with pensions for those leaving the UK's fire services and police forces to serve in the armed forces (section 1-5), including those in the army and navy reserves (section 6) but excluding those in the London Fire Brigade (section 7). It also clarified such matters regarding probationers and those in training on leave (sections 8 and 13) and that those injured on war service would have that injury counted as non-accidental injuries (section 11), but that nobody leaving the force to join the armed services needed to re-attest (section 9). It also made different provisions for chief officers (section 10).",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Police and Firemen Act was an Act passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom soon after the outbreak of the Second World War. It was mainly concerned with pensions for those leaving the UK's fire services and police forces to serve in the armed forces, including those in the army and navy reserves but excluding those in the London Fire Brigade. It also clarified such matters regarding probationers and those in training on leave and that those injured on war service would have that injury counted as non-accidental injuries, but that nobody leaving the force to join the armed services needed to re-attest. It also made different provisions for chief officers.
|
2023-12-13T11:52:06Z
|
2023-12-14T10:28:17Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use British English",
"Template:Infobox UK legislation"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_and_Firemen_(War_Service)_Act_1939
|
75,553,042 |
Dalian Barracuda Bay Football Stadium
|
The Barracuda Bay Football Stadium is a 63,000-seat football stadium in Dalian, Liaoning, China. The stadium is the home of China League One club Dalian Professional F.C.. The stadium was built by the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC). The construction of the stadium began in 2020 and was completed in 2023.
On 16 June 2023, the Chinese national football team hosted Myanmar in a friendly at the Barracuda Bay Football Stadium, which ended in a 4–0 win for China.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Barracuda Bay Football Stadium is a 63,000-seat football stadium in Dalian, Liaoning, China. The stadium is the home of China League One club Dalian Professional F.C.. The stadium was built by the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC). The construction of the stadium began in 2020 and was completed in 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "On 16 June 2023, the Chinese national football team hosted Myanmar in a friendly at the Barracuda Bay Football Stadium, which ended in a 4–0 win for China.",
"title": "History"
}
] |
The Barracuda Bay Football Stadium is a 63,000-seat football stadium in Dalian, Liaoning, China. The stadium is the home of China League One club Dalian Professional F.C.. The stadium was built by the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC). The construction of the stadium began in 2020 and was completed in 2023.
|
2023-12-13T12:05:09Z
|
2023-12-27T03:34:57Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:PRChina-sports-venue-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox venue"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalian_Barracuda_Bay_Football_Stadium
|
75,553,051 |
Painting the Town (film)
|
Painting the Town is a 1987 Australian documentary film, created by Trevor Graham, looking at Jewish artist Yosl Bergner's time in Australia.
Jim Schembri of the Age states "as far as films about artists and their work go this film has a rare quality; it is entertaining." Diana Simmonds wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald that the filmmakers "put together a film that's as racy as a fiction drama, as droll (courtesy of their witty and articulate subject) as a comedy play, and as informative and visionary as many programs twice the length."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Painting the Town is a 1987 Australian documentary film, created by Trevor Graham, looking at Jewish artist Yosl Bergner's time in Australia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Jim Schembri of the Age states \"as far as films about artists and their work go this film has a rare quality; it is entertaining.\" Diana Simmonds wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald that the filmmakers \"put together a film that's as racy as a fiction drama, as droll (courtesy of their witty and articulate subject) as a comedy play, and as informative and visionary as many programs twice the length.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Painting the Town is a 1987 Australian documentary film, created by Trevor Graham, looking at Jewish artist Yosl Bergner's time in Australia.
|
2023-12-13T12:07:41Z
|
2023-12-13T12:07:41Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painting_the_Town_(film)
|
75,553,055 |
Kemira: Diary of a Strike
|
Kemira: Diary of a Strike is a 1984 Australian documentary film, created by Tom Zubrycki, covering a miner's strike in Woolongong.
Anna-Maria Dell'oso of the Sydney Morning Herald gave it a mixed review. She states "In terms of insight, is not the greatest documentary ever made. It provokes audience response because it shows people fighting injustice with the exhilerating energy of co-operation and vision that a strike can foster and it gives a hint of Woolongong's strong working-class social networks." She finishes "Worth seeing." Also in the Sydney Morning Herald Bronwyn Watson calls it "One of the best Australian-made documentaries" and says it is "a very cleverly made film. It mixes interviews, black and white footage from the 1949 coal strikes, TV news reports and the ludicrous We Love Woolongong commercials. But its technical expertise never becomes intrusive."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kemira: Diary of a Strike is a 1984 Australian documentary film, created by Tom Zubrycki, covering a miner's strike in Woolongong.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Anna-Maria Dell'oso of the Sydney Morning Herald gave it a mixed review. She states \"In terms of insight, is not the greatest documentary ever made. It provokes audience response because it shows people fighting injustice with the exhilerating energy of co-operation and vision that a strike can foster and it gives a hint of Woolongong's strong working-class social networks.\" She finishes \"Worth seeing.\" Also in the Sydney Morning Herald Bronwyn Watson calls it \"One of the best Australian-made documentaries\" and says it is \"a very cleverly made film. It mixes interviews, black and white footage from the 1949 coal strikes, TV news reports and the ludicrous We Love Woolongong commercials. But its technical expertise never becomes intrusive.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Kemira: Diary of a Strike is a 1984 Australian documentary film, created by Tom Zubrycki, covering a miner's strike in Woolongong.
|
2023-12-13T12:09:06Z
|
2023-12-13T23:50:15Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:IMDb title"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kemira:_Diary_of_a_Strike
|
75,553,056 |
Mohammed Raheel Mouseen
|
Mohammed Raheel Mouseen (born 20 December 1996) is an Indian field hockey player from Karnataka. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) team in the domestic tournaments. He plays both the Hockey 5s and the Senior outdoor formats.
Mouseen is born in Bengaluru. His mother is Taj Begum and his father Mohammed Naseeruddin was a former national-level hockey player at Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). His grandfather Ameer Uddin was also a hockey player. His brother Mohammed Naeemuddin played for CAG team and was also called for the junior national camps but could not make it to the Indian team. Raheel joined the Sports Authority of India (SAI) hostel at Bengaluru in 2012 at the age of 15. He did his schooling at St. Joseph's School where he started his hockey and completed his B.Com. from Surana College, Bengaluru. His learnt his basics from coach Manohar Katke before training under coaches Ashwath and Prabhakar at the SAI hostel.
Raheel Mouseen started hockey early at St.Joseph's school and came through the ranks of sub-junior and junior hockey. While training at the Bengaluru SAI hostel, he played in the Junior Nationals and other domestic tournaments and was spotted by Air India. He played for SAI for eight years and for the airlines from 2016 for four years. With him as striker, Air India won the Lal Bahadur Shastri tournament title in 2019 at Amritsar. He was the highest scorer and was also declared as the Best Player of the tournament. The next year, he also excelled for the Air India team, which reached the finals of the Hockey India Senior Nationals in 2020. He won a bronze medal in the Nationals in 2021, representing Karnataka. In between in 2018 and 2019, he was called up for the Senior camp but failed to make it to the Indian team. He was also part of the Karnataka team that won the gold medal in the National Games in October 2022, that paved way for his debut for Senior India outdoor side. He was part of the Karnataka team which finished fourth at the Senior Nationals at Chennai in November 2023.
Raheel Mouseen made his senior India debut in the Hockey 5s format at the inaugural edition of Hero Hockey five-a-side Championship at Lausanne in June 2022, where India won the gold medal. He scored 10 goals at Lausanne and was declared as the Best Player of the tournament. He made his Senior India (outdoor) debut at the 2021-22 FIH Hockey Pro-League (M) in October 2022 and went on to play the league in the next year too. In between, he played the test matches against Australia in December 2022. In September 2023, he was the Indian vice-captain at the Men's Hockey 5s Asia Cup 2023 at Salalah, Malaysia. He also played the FIH Hockey Pro league for the third year - 2023–24. Now he is part of the regular 33-member Indian core group of probables.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mohammed Raheel Mouseen (born 20 December 1996) is an Indian field hockey player from Karnataka. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) team in the domestic tournaments. He plays both the Hockey 5s and the Senior outdoor formats.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Mouseen is born in Bengaluru. His mother is Taj Begum and his father Mohammed Naseeruddin was a former national-level hockey player at Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). His grandfather Ameer Uddin was also a hockey player. His brother Mohammed Naeemuddin played for CAG team and was also called for the junior national camps but could not make it to the Indian team. Raheel joined the Sports Authority of India (SAI) hostel at Bengaluru in 2012 at the age of 15. He did his schooling at St. Joseph's School where he started his hockey and completed his B.Com. from Surana College, Bengaluru. His learnt his basics from coach Manohar Katke before training under coaches Ashwath and Prabhakar at the SAI hostel.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Raheel Mouseen started hockey early at St.Joseph's school and came through the ranks of sub-junior and junior hockey. While training at the Bengaluru SAI hostel, he played in the Junior Nationals and other domestic tournaments and was spotted by Air India. He played for SAI for eight years and for the airlines from 2016 for four years. With him as striker, Air India won the Lal Bahadur Shastri tournament title in 2019 at Amritsar. He was the highest scorer and was also declared as the Best Player of the tournament. The next year, he also excelled for the Air India team, which reached the finals of the Hockey India Senior Nationals in 2020. He won a bronze medal in the Nationals in 2021, representing Karnataka. In between in 2018 and 2019, he was called up for the Senior camp but failed to make it to the Indian team. He was also part of the Karnataka team that won the gold medal in the National Games in October 2022, that paved way for his debut for Senior India outdoor side. He was part of the Karnataka team which finished fourth at the Senior Nationals at Chennai in November 2023.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Raheel Mouseen made his senior India debut in the Hockey 5s format at the inaugural edition of Hero Hockey five-a-side Championship at Lausanne in June 2022, where India won the gold medal. He scored 10 goals at Lausanne and was declared as the Best Player of the tournament. He made his Senior India (outdoor) debut at the 2021-22 FIH Hockey Pro-League (M) in October 2022 and went on to play the league in the next year too. In between, he played the test matches against Australia in December 2022. In September 2023, he was the Indian vice-captain at the Men's Hockey 5s Asia Cup 2023 at Salalah, Malaysia. He also played the FIH Hockey Pro league for the third year - 2023–24. Now he is part of the regular 33-member Indian core group of probables.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Mohammed Raheel Mouseen is an Indian field hockey player from Karnataka. He plays as a mid-fielder for the Indian national team and represents Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) team in the domestic tournaments. He plays both the Hockey 5s and the Senior outdoor formats.
|
2023-12-13T12:09:19Z
|
2023-12-26T16:42:02Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammed_Raheel_Mouseen
|
75,553,064 |
Stepping Out (1980 film)
|
Stepping Out is a 1980 Australian documentary film, created by Chris Noonan, that follows a mentally handicapped theater group in the leadup to their first public performance at the Sydney Opera House.The film screened at the United Nations closing ceremony for the International Year of the Disabled.
Stepping Out was largley filmed in 1979 in Gore Hill in Sydney, following residents of the Lorna Hodgkinson Sunshine Home. It features workshops and rehersals, led by Aldo Gennaro, for a series of performances of the shows" The Prince and Life, Images and Reflections at Sydney Opera House.
John Lapsley of the Sydney Morning Herald gave it 4 stars. He states "It's not only an important documentary. It is also a rivetting, superbly made one which has been quite brilliantly filmed by cinematographer Dean Semmler." In his Canberra Times Dougal McDonald touches on the aftermath saying "what happened after the film was completed is not so much crazy as nasty. Aldo Gennaro and the matron were dismissed without notice. Chris and Romayne were separated. These were the consequences of the film's attempt to touch on the question of sexuality in the intellectually handicapped. In this, 'Stepping Out' is significantly more forward-looking than another important documentary in the same field". Julian Lewis in the Australian Jewish News writes "Stepping Out entirely justifies the U.N.'s choice of it as the official film for the 'Year of the Disabled'"
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Stepping Out is a 1980 Australian documentary film, created by Chris Noonan, that follows a mentally handicapped theater group in the leadup to their first public performance at the Sydney Opera House.The film screened at the United Nations closing ceremony for the International Year of the Disabled.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Stepping Out was largley filmed in 1979 in Gore Hill in Sydney, following residents of the Lorna Hodgkinson Sunshine Home. It features workshops and rehersals, led by Aldo Gennaro, for a series of performances of the shows\" The Prince and Life, Images and Reflections at Sydney Opera House.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "John Lapsley of the Sydney Morning Herald gave it 4 stars. He states \"It's not only an important documentary. It is also a rivetting, superbly made one which has been quite brilliantly filmed by cinematographer Dean Semmler.\" In his Canberra Times Dougal McDonald touches on the aftermath saying \"what happened after the film was completed is not so much crazy as nasty. Aldo Gennaro and the matron were dismissed without notice. Chris and Romayne were separated. These were the consequences of the film's attempt to touch on the question of sexuality in the intellectually handicapped. In this, 'Stepping Out' is significantly more forward-looking than another important documentary in the same field\". Julian Lewis in the Australian Jewish News writes \"Stepping Out entirely justifies the U.N.'s choice of it as the official film for the 'Year of the Disabled'\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Stepping Out is a 1980 Australian documentary film, created by Chris Noonan, that follows a mentally handicapped theater group in the leadup to their first public performance at the Sydney Opera House.The film screened at the United Nations closing ceremony for the International Year of the Disabled.
|
2023-12-13T12:10:57Z
|
2023-12-14T09:02:07Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepping_Out_(1980_film)
|
75,553,070 |
Angels of War
|
Angels of War is a 1982 Australian documentary film, created by Andrew Pike, Hank Nelson and Gavan Daws, about the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels in Papua New Guinea in World War 2.
Angels of War cost $80,000 with funding provided by the Australian National University and the Australian War Memorial.
Neil Jillet of the Age says in his capsual review that it "is an interesting compilation of new (color) and archival (black and white) film, and a reminder of how soon we forget those who helped Australia to victory." In the Canberra Times Philip Castle finishes "This excellent film, being shown appropriately around Anzac Day, might in a significant way record the service of the Fuzz-Wuzzy Angels, lest we forget."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Angels of War is a 1982 Australian documentary film, created by Andrew Pike, Hank Nelson and Gavan Daws, about the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels in Papua New Guinea in World War 2.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Angels of War cost $80,000 with funding provided by the Australian National University and the Australian War Memorial.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Neil Jillet of the Age says in his capsual review that it \"is an interesting compilation of new (color) and archival (black and white) film, and a reminder of how soon we forget those who helped Australia to victory.\" In the Canberra Times Philip Castle finishes \"This excellent film, being shown appropriately around Anzac Day, might in a significant way record the service of the Fuzz-Wuzzy Angels, lest we forget.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Angels of War is a 1982 Australian documentary film, created by Andrew Pike, Hank Nelson and Gavan Daws, about the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels in Papua New Guinea in World War 2.
|
2023-12-13T12:12:17Z
|
2023-12-13T13:13:53Z
|
[
"Template:Citation",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angels_of_War
|
75,553,072 |
2024 ASB Classic
|
The 2024 Auckland Open (sponsored by ASB Bank) is a joint professional men's and women's tennis tournament to be played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland. The 37th edition of the women's event (a WTA 250 tournament) will be held from 1 to 7 January 2023 and the 46th edition of the men's event (an ATP 250 tournament) is scheduled from 8 to 13 January 2023.
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2024 Auckland Open (sponsored by ASB Bank) is a joint professional men's and women's tennis tournament to be played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland. The 37th edition of the women's event (a WTA 250 tournament) will be held from 1 to 7 January 2023 and the 46th edition of the men's event (an ATP 250 tournament) is scheduled from 8 to 13 January 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:",
"title": "ATP singles main draw entrants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:",
"title": "ATP singles main draw entrants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:",
"title": "ATP doubles main draw entrants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:",
"title": "WTA singles main draw entrants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:",
"title": "WTA singles main draw entrants"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:",
"title": "WTA doubles main draw entrants"
}
] |
The 2024 Auckland Open is a joint professional men's and women's tennis tournament to be played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland. The 37th edition of the women's event will be held from 1 to 7 January 2023 and the 46th edition of the men's event is scheduled from 8 to 13 January 2023.
|
2023-12-13T12:12:36Z
|
2023-12-31T22:58:57Z
|
[
"Template:Main",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Heineken Open tournaments",
"Template:ASB Classic tournaments",
"Template:2024 WTA Tour",
"Template:Infobox tennis event",
"Template:Flag",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:2024 ATP Tour"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_ASB_Classic
|
75,553,075 |
Pingguo Stadium
|
The Pingguo Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium located in Pingguo, Guangxi, China. It is the home of China League One club Guangxi Pingguo Haliao. Construction of the stadium began on November 11, 2004, and was completed on August 31, 2006.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Pingguo Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium located in Pingguo, Guangxi, China. It is the home of China League One club Guangxi Pingguo Haliao. Construction of the stadium began on November 11, 2004, and was completed on August 31, 2006.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Pingguo Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium located in Pingguo, Guangxi, China. It is the home of China League One club Guangxi Pingguo Haliao. Construction of the stadium began on November 11, 2004, and was completed on August 31, 2006.
|
2023-12-13T12:13:10Z
|
2023-12-20T21:05:08Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:PRChina-sports-venue-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox venue",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pingguo_Stadium
|
75,553,076 |
Stella David
|
Stella David is the interim CEO of Entain, after Jette Nygaard-Andersen stood down as CEO in December 2023.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Stella David is the interim CEO of Entain, after Jette Nygaard-Andersen stood down as CEO in December 2023.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Stella David is the interim CEO of Entain, after Jette Nygaard-Andersen stood down as CEO in December 2023.
|
2023-12-13T12:13:16Z
|
2023-12-13T12:19:10Z
|
[
"Template:In use",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stella_David
|
75,553,079 |
The Dreaming City (radio serial)
|
The Dreaming City is a 1952 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It played Monday to Thursdays.
According to ABC Weekly "The action takes place during Venice’s International Film Festival, beginning with the discovery of a film producer dead in his hotel room. The intrigue in which various characters engage stands out in dramatic relief against the picturesque charm of the back-ground. "
According to one review "it's all about fights, abductions, dukes, passwords, countesses, vendettas, and the FBI. Competent enough, but oh. so familiar!"
It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Dreaming City is a 1952 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It played Monday to Thursdays.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "According to ABC Weekly \"The action takes place during Venice’s International Film Festival, beginning with the discovery of a film producer dead in his hotel room. The intrigue in which various characters engage stands out in dramatic relief against the picturesque charm of the back-ground. \"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "According to one review \"it's all about fights, abductions, dukes, passwords, countesses, vendettas, and the FBI. Competent enough, but oh. so familiar!\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Dreaming City is a 1952 Australian radio serial written by Morris West. It played Monday to Thursdays. According to ABC Weekly "The action takes place during Venice’s International Film Festival, beginning with the discovery of a film producer dead in his hotel room. The intrigue in which various characters engage stands out in dramatic relief against the picturesque charm of the back-ground. " According to one review "it's all about fights, abductions, dukes, passwords, countesses, vendettas, and the FBI. Competent enough, but oh. so familiar!" It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.
|
2023-12-13T12:14:40Z
|
2023-12-14T15:56:30Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dreaming_City_(radio_serial)
|
75,553,081 |
Raoul Wallenberg: Between the Lines
|
Raoul Wallenberg: Between the Lines is a 1985 Australian documentary film, directed by Karin Altmann and produced by Bob Weis, about Raoul Wallenberg, who saved the lives of many Jews in Budapest during World War 2.
Dennis Pryor of the Age says "Weis and Altman have produced something worthy of the man himself." When broadcast by Channel Ten the Age's Barbara Hooks finishes "The results are totally absorbing and deserving of more than the late hour allocated to them."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Raoul Wallenberg: Between the Lines is a 1985 Australian documentary film, directed by Karin Altmann and produced by Bob Weis, about Raoul Wallenberg, who saved the lives of many Jews in Budapest during World War 2.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Dennis Pryor of the Age says \"Weis and Altman have produced something worthy of the man himself.\" When broadcast by Channel Ten the Age's Barbara Hooks finishes \"The results are totally absorbing and deserving of more than the late hour allocated to them.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Raoul Wallenberg: Between the Lines is a 1985 Australian documentary film, directed by Karin Altmann and produced by Bob Weis, about Raoul Wallenberg, who saved the lives of many Jews in Budapest during World War 2.
|
2023-12-13T12:15:08Z
|
2023-12-13T12:15:08Z
|
[
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raoul_Wallenberg:_Between_the_Lines
|
75,553,099 |
The Golden Road (radio serial)
|
The Golden Road is a 1954 Australian radio serial by Morris West.
It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Golden Road is a 1954 Australian radio serial by Morris West.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Golden Road is a 1954 Australian radio serial by Morris West. It was one of a number of 52-episode serials written by West.
|
2023-12-13T12:19:23Z
|
2023-12-13T12:26:21Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Morris West",
"Template:Infobox radio show",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golden_Road_(radio_serial)
|
75,553,100 |
1839 Tennessee gubernatorial election
|
The 1839 Tennessee gubernatorial election was held on 1 August 1839 in order to elect the Governor of Tennessee. Incumbent Whig Governor Newton Cannon lost re-election against Democratic nominee and former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives James K. Polk.
On election day, 1 August 1839, Democratic nominee James K. Polk won the election by a margin of 26,909 votes against his Whig opponent and incumbent Governor Newton Cannon, thereby gaining Democratic control over the office of Governor. Polk was sworn in as the 9th Governor of Tennessee on 14 October 1839.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 1839 Tennessee gubernatorial election was held on 1 August 1839 in order to elect the Governor of Tennessee. Incumbent Whig Governor Newton Cannon lost re-election against Democratic nominee and former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives James K. Polk.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "On election day, 1 August 1839, Democratic nominee James K. Polk won the election by a margin of 26,909 votes against his Whig opponent and incumbent Governor Newton Cannon, thereby gaining Democratic control over the office of Governor. Polk was sworn in as the 9th Governor of Tennessee on 14 October 1839.",
"title": "General election"
}
] |
The 1839 Tennessee gubernatorial election was held on 1 August 1839 in order to elect the Governor of Tennessee. Incumbent Whig Governor Newton Cannon lost re-election against Democratic nominee and former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives James K. Polk.
|
2023-12-13T12:19:35Z
|
2023-12-13T12:34:43Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Elections in Tennessee",
"Template:Election box winning candidate with party link no change",
"Template:Election box begin no change",
"Template:Election box total no change",
"Template:Election box gain with party link no change",
"Template:Election box end",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox election"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1839_Tennessee_gubernatorial_election
|
75,553,105 |
Jiading Stadium
|
Jiading Stadium, located in Jiading District, Shanghai, China, is a multi-purpose stadium with a capacity of 10000 with various sports facilities.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Jiading Stadium, located in Jiading District, Shanghai, China, is a multi-purpose stadium with a capacity of 10000 with various sports facilities.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Jiading Stadium, located in Jiading District, Shanghai, China, is a multi-purpose stadium with a capacity of 10000 with various sports facilities.
|
2023-12-13T12:20:33Z
|
2023-12-24T14:14:36Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Proposed deletion/dated",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiading_Stadium
|
75,553,106 |
Joe Leahy's Neighbours
|
Joe Leahy's Neighbours is a 1989 Australian documentary film, created by Robin Anderson and Bob Connolly, looking at Papua New Guinean business man Joe Leahy and relationship to those around him. It is is some ways a sequel to First Contact.
Neil Jillet of the Age says "Documentary is a hopelessly inadequate word to describe 'Joe Leahy's Neighbours'. This wonderful film has the dramatic strength of a first-class feature. It is an anthropological tragi-comedy full of conflicts among fascinating characters. It is also a psychological thriller about collectivism v. capitalism, about “primitive” ways v. “sophisticated” ones, that regularly seem about to erupt into violence, possibly murder." The Sun-Heralds Rob Lowing finishes "the slyly witty final images are a summary in themselves and a memorable finishing touch to a film which is both thought provoking and entertaining." Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald' David Stratton says "This beautifully-made 90-minute documentary is an invaluable insight into life inPNG, and a perceptive study of a strange king of colonialism".
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Joe Leahy's Neighbours is a 1989 Australian documentary film, created by Robin Anderson and Bob Connolly, looking at Papua New Guinean business man Joe Leahy and relationship to those around him. It is is some ways a sequel to First Contact.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Neil Jillet of the Age says \"Documentary is a hopelessly inadequate word to describe 'Joe Leahy's Neighbours'. This wonderful film has the dramatic strength of a first-class feature. It is an anthropological tragi-comedy full of conflicts among fascinating characters. It is also a psychological thriller about collectivism v. capitalism, about “primitive” ways v. “sophisticated” ones, that regularly seem about to erupt into violence, possibly murder.\" The Sun-Heralds Rob Lowing finishes \"the slyly witty final images are a summary in themselves and a memorable finishing touch to a film which is both thought provoking and entertaining.\" Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald' David Stratton says \"This beautifully-made 90-minute documentary is an invaluable insight into life inPNG, and a perceptive study of a strange king of colonialism\".",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Joe Leahy's Neighbours is a 1989 Australian documentary film, created by Robin Anderson and Bob Connolly, looking at Papua New Guinean business man Joe Leahy and relationship to those around him. It is is some ways a sequel to First Contact.
|
2023-12-13T12:20:39Z
|
2023-12-14T10:26:18Z
|
[
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Leahy%27s_Neighbours
|
75,553,113 |
Prokaryotic mRNA degradation
|
Prokaryotic messenger RNA (mRNA) degradation, also called prokaryotic mRNA decay, is an important part of gene regulation in prokaryotes.. In this process, specific proteins target and break down mRNA. These proteins break down certain sections of the mRNA, such as 5’ ends and specific base pairs. This degradation happens in response to different environmental cues, allowing the organism to stop expressing certain genes in order to survive. This also occurs during and after translation, in order to reuse the material that was used to create the RNA. This process can vary, depending on the organism and the situation.
mRNA degradation targets specific sequences of messenger RNA, allowing some to stay in the cell for longer than others—and even genes within the same strand of RNA can be degraded at different rates. This is true in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Because of this, mRNA degradation plays a key role in determining which genes are expressed. Also, this process gives organisms greater evolutionary fitness, as it means they do not have to expend energy to find new resources.
Often, mRNA is degraded by proteins called ribonucleases, which separate the 5’ end of the RNA from the 3’ end of the RNA; there are several different kinds of ribonucleases, which appear in different organisms.
One main ribonuclease in prokaryotes is called ribonuclease E, and another ribonuclease that degrades RNA in prokaryotes is called ribonuclease G. It is a homolog of ribonuclease E. This was determined mainly by studies that focused on Escherichia coli (E. coli), and this is not the case in all situations. For example, stem-loops, another part of mRNA, are not degraded by ribonucleases, but it is not known how they are degraded.
Many species of bacteria do not create ribonuclease E or a homolog of it. Some species of bacteria use a ribonuclease called ribonuclease Y, which is not a homolog of ribonuclease E. Its structure is different from that of ribonuclease E, though they perform the same function in the cell.
One study found that in Bacillus subtilis, ribonuclease Y targeted different areas in RNA. The researchers that carried out this study grew samples of multiple strains of Bacillus subtilis, and then separated proteins from the rest of the cell material. After that, they analyzed the proteins. They found that in Bacillus subtilis, ribonuclease Y affected around 900 mRNA sequences. 550 of those went up in abundance, and 350 of them decreased. This means that genes are affected by ribonuclease Y in this species, though not all of them are affected in the same way.
Some bacteria use a ribonuclease called ribonuclease III. Robertson et al. found that ribonuclease III is a ribonuclease that works to decay double-stranded RNA specifically. The researchers who conducted this study treated samples of E. coli with a mixture of chemicals. They found that when treated with these chemicals, some of the RNA would dissolve, but not all of it. They then analyzed the RNA that did not dissolve, and found that it only worked on double-stranded RNA.
Ribonuclease III has been studied more since. Further study of it has led to greater understanding of the mechanics of double-stranded RNA. However, it is also now known that this protein plays a smaller part in gene regulation than ribonucleases E and Y.
Prokaryotic mRNA decay can happen in response to stressors. These stressors include temperature, oxidative stress, and drug treatments. One study found that in 96 different species of bacteria, including E.coli, mRNA degradation occurred in response to oxidative stress, as well as to a drug treatment. mRNA can degrade/decay at multiple steps in the process of creating a protein. It can also decay while it is in the process of being translated, as Dihub Pelechano et al. who found, by analyzing samples of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Based on the data from the ribosomes, mRNA degradation occurred in specific sites in the RNA that was being translated.
However, not all species are able to degrade mRNA fast enough to survive. One study found that in a temperature-sensitive strain of E. coli, there was a mutation that could be lethal: the RNA in this strain of E. coli degraded much slower than in other strains. The researchers who conducted this study exposed samples of the strain to different temperatures, and analyzed the decay of its RNA, comparing it to a temperature-resistant strain. They found that in the temperature-sensitive strain, RNA decayed slower than in the temperature-resistant strain, meaning that temperature sensitivity in the temperature-sensitive strain may have been due to the accumulation of RNA in the cell.
Prokaryotic mRNA degradation poses a difficulty to researchers developing mRNA vaccines. This is the case because the degradation means that mRNA is not stable, and might not deliver the vaccine effectively; this problem has been combated by chemically modifying mRNA, using several different kinds of chemicals, such as lipids, lipid-like materials, polymers, and lipid-polymer hybrids, but it has not been solved yet.
Despite these challenges, research marches on for various possible mRNA vaccines and immunotherapies. These include ones for cancer, ones for infectious diseases, and ones for genetic diseases.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Prokaryotic messenger RNA (mRNA) degradation, also called prokaryotic mRNA decay, is an important part of gene regulation in prokaryotes.. In this process, specific proteins target and break down mRNA. These proteins break down certain sections of the mRNA, such as 5’ ends and specific base pairs. This degradation happens in response to different environmental cues, allowing the organism to stop expressing certain genes in order to survive. This also occurs during and after translation, in order to reuse the material that was used to create the RNA. This process can vary, depending on the organism and the situation.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "mRNA degradation targets specific sequences of messenger RNA, allowing some to stay in the cell for longer than others—and even genes within the same strand of RNA can be degraded at different rates. This is true in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Because of this, mRNA degradation plays a key role in determining which genes are expressed. Also, this process gives organisms greater evolutionary fitness, as it means they do not have to expend energy to find new resources.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Often, mRNA is degraded by proteins called ribonucleases, which separate the 5’ end of the RNA from the 3’ end of the RNA; there are several different kinds of ribonucleases, which appear in different organisms.",
"title": "Ribonucleases: E, G, and Y"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "One main ribonuclease in prokaryotes is called ribonuclease E, and another ribonuclease that degrades RNA in prokaryotes is called ribonuclease G. It is a homolog of ribonuclease E. This was determined mainly by studies that focused on Escherichia coli (E. coli), and this is not the case in all situations. For example, stem-loops, another part of mRNA, are not degraded by ribonucleases, but it is not known how they are degraded.",
"title": "Ribonucleases: E, G, and Y"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Many species of bacteria do not create ribonuclease E or a homolog of it. Some species of bacteria use a ribonuclease called ribonuclease Y, which is not a homolog of ribonuclease E. Its structure is different from that of ribonuclease E, though they perform the same function in the cell.",
"title": "Ribonucleases: E, G, and Y"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "One study found that in Bacillus subtilis, ribonuclease Y targeted different areas in RNA. The researchers that carried out this study grew samples of multiple strains of Bacillus subtilis, and then separated proteins from the rest of the cell material. After that, they analyzed the proteins. They found that in Bacillus subtilis, ribonuclease Y affected around 900 mRNA sequences. 550 of those went up in abundance, and 350 of them decreased. This means that genes are affected by ribonuclease Y in this species, though not all of them are affected in the same way.",
"title": "Ribonucleases: E, G, and Y"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Some bacteria use a ribonuclease called ribonuclease III. Robertson et al. found that ribonuclease III is a ribonuclease that works to decay double-stranded RNA specifically. The researchers who conducted this study treated samples of E. coli with a mixture of chemicals. They found that when treated with these chemicals, some of the RNA would dissolve, but not all of it. They then analyzed the RNA that did not dissolve, and found that it only worked on double-stranded RNA.",
"title": "Ribonuclease III"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Ribonuclease III has been studied more since. Further study of it has led to greater understanding of the mechanics of double-stranded RNA. However, it is also now known that this protein plays a smaller part in gene regulation than ribonucleases E and Y.",
"title": "Ribonuclease III"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Prokaryotic mRNA decay can happen in response to stressors. These stressors include temperature, oxidative stress, and drug treatments. One study found that in 96 different species of bacteria, including E.coli, mRNA degradation occurred in response to oxidative stress, as well as to a drug treatment. mRNA can degrade/decay at multiple steps in the process of creating a protein. It can also decay while it is in the process of being translated, as Dihub Pelechano et al. who found, by analyzing samples of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Based on the data from the ribosomes, mRNA degradation occurred in specific sites in the RNA that was being translated.",
"title": "Processes of decay"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "However, not all species are able to degrade mRNA fast enough to survive. One study found that in a temperature-sensitive strain of E. coli, there was a mutation that could be lethal: the RNA in this strain of E. coli degraded much slower than in other strains. The researchers who conducted this study exposed samples of the strain to different temperatures, and analyzed the decay of its RNA, comparing it to a temperature-resistant strain. They found that in the temperature-sensitive strain, RNA decayed slower than in the temperature-resistant strain, meaning that temperature sensitivity in the temperature-sensitive strain may have been due to the accumulation of RNA in the cell.",
"title": "Processes of decay"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Prokaryotic mRNA degradation poses a difficulty to researchers developing mRNA vaccines. This is the case because the degradation means that mRNA is not stable, and might not deliver the vaccine effectively; this problem has been combated by chemically modifying mRNA, using several different kinds of chemicals, such as lipids, lipid-like materials, polymers, and lipid-polymer hybrids, but it has not been solved yet.",
"title": "Vaccines"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Despite these challenges, research marches on for various possible mRNA vaccines and immunotherapies. These include ones for cancer, ones for infectious diseases, and ones for genetic diseases.",
"title": "Vaccines"
}
] |
Prokaryotic messenger RNA (mRNA) degradation, also called prokaryotic mRNA decay, is an important part of gene regulation in prokaryotes.. In this process, specific proteins target and break down mRNA. These proteins break down certain sections of the mRNA, such as 5’ ends and specific base pairs. This degradation happens in response to different environmental cues, allowing the organism to stop expressing certain genes in order to survive. This also occurs during and after translation, in order to reuse the material that was used to create the RNA. This process can vary, depending on the organism and the situation. mRNA degradation targets specific sequences of messenger RNA, allowing some to stay in the cell for longer than others—and even genes within the same strand of RNA can be degraded at different rates. This is true in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Because of this, mRNA degradation plays a key role in determining which genes are expressed. Also, this process gives organisms greater evolutionary fitness, as it means they do not have to expend energy to find new resources.
|
2023-12-13T12:21:56Z
|
2023-12-25T06:45:36Z
|
[
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prokaryotic_mRNA_degradation
|
75,553,114 |
For All The World To See
|
For All The World To See is a 1992 Australian documentary film, created by Pat Fiske, that follows Professor Fred Hollows on a trip to Eritrea and Nepal.
Dougal MacDonald of the Canberra Times gave it 4 stars. He finishes "I have said little in this review about Hollows's work, the restoration of sight in people living in poverty. The film admirably tells that story, delivering a superbly crafted coda which, without fanfare or hype, leaves no doubt about the esteem with which the people he has helped to help themselves regard him." Neil Jillett in the Age says "This excellent documentary by US-born director Pat Fiske presents Hollows as a man whose folksy manner at times seems less than genuine, but whose nobility as a practical humanitarian is never in doubt."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "For All The World To See is a 1992 Australian documentary film, created by Pat Fiske, that follows Professor Fred Hollows on a trip to Eritrea and Nepal.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Dougal MacDonald of the Canberra Times gave it 4 stars. He finishes \"I have said little in this review about Hollows's work, the restoration of sight in people living in poverty. The film admirably tells that story, delivering a superbly crafted coda which, without fanfare or hype, leaves no doubt about the esteem with which the people he has helped to help themselves regard him.\" Neil Jillett in the Age says \"This excellent documentary by US-born director Pat Fiske presents Hollows as a man whose folksy manner at times seems less than genuine, but whose nobility as a practical humanitarian is never in doubt.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
For All The World To See is a 1992 Australian documentary film, created by Pat Fiske, that follows Professor Fred Hollows on a trip to Eritrea and Nepal.
|
2023-12-13T12:22:13Z
|
2023-12-13T13:19:59Z
|
[
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/For_All_The_World_To_See
|
75,553,115 |
Exile And The Kingdom
|
Exile and the Kingdom is a 1993 documentary film that looks at the destruction of Indigenous culture in Western Australia's Pilbara region.
Writing in the Sunday Age Debi Enker says "This eloquent film has a quiet passion and justifiable anger that only gradually emerge and it will be a revelation for urban whites for whom questions of native title and land rights might seem remote and impenetrably complicated." The Age's Tom Ryan reviews it positively saying "Quite properly, 'Exile And The Kingdom' is an angry film. And, even if it is too neatly packaged to be strictly described as anthropological, it speaks with a compelling voice about the struggle for survival of an invaded people." Also in the Age Ross Warneke finishes "By allowing the Aborigines to tell their own rich and colorful story, without any apparent editorial interference from those behind the cameras, Exile and the Kingdom made a valuable contribution to the Mabo debate. This was a documentary of great merit, and a repeat screening should be compulsory viewing for all Australians." Tim Rowse's Filmnews review begins "The great achievement of this film is that it allows two related groups of Aboriginal people from the Pilbara region, the Injibamdi and the Ngamula, to relocate themselves within the spatial grid through which we are used to seeing them."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Exile and the Kingdom is a 1993 documentary film that looks at the destruction of Indigenous culture in Western Australia's Pilbara region.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Writing in the Sunday Age Debi Enker says \"This eloquent film has a quiet passion and justifiable anger that only gradually emerge and it will be a revelation for urban whites for whom questions of native title and land rights might seem remote and impenetrably complicated.\" The Age's Tom Ryan reviews it positively saying \"Quite properly, 'Exile And The Kingdom' is an angry film. And, even if it is too neatly packaged to be strictly described as anthropological, it speaks with a compelling voice about the struggle for survival of an invaded people.\" Also in the Age Ross Warneke finishes \"By allowing the Aborigines to tell their own rich and colorful story, without any apparent editorial interference from those behind the cameras, Exile and the Kingdom made a valuable contribution to the Mabo debate. This was a documentary of great merit, and a repeat screening should be compulsory viewing for all Australians.\" Tim Rowse's Filmnews review begins \"The great achievement of this film is that it allows two related groups of Aboriginal people from the Pilbara region, the Injibamdi and the Ngamula, to relocate themselves within the spatial grid through which we are used to seeing them.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Exile and the Kingdom is a 1993 documentary film that looks at the destruction of Indigenous culture in Western Australia's Pilbara region.
|
2023-12-13T12:23:13Z
|
2023-12-13T12:23:13Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile_And_The_Kingdom
|
75,553,121 |
Handmaidens and Battleaxes
|
Handmaidens and Battleaxes is a 1990 documentary film, created by Rosalind Gillespie, about the evolving role of nurses.
In Filmnews Martha Ansara says "Handmaidens and Battleaxes is one of those rare films which will actually make an impact upon public perception of an issue. The mere fact of its existence as testament is evidence of the release of the potential of nurses, so long suppressed and downgraded. The conceptual skills of female director and crew demonstrate, to me at least, that the feminist film can communicate complex ideas to a wide audience without lowering the filmic common denominator."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Handmaidens and Battleaxes is a 1990 documentary film, created by Rosalind Gillespie, about the evolving role of nurses.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In Filmnews Martha Ansara says \"Handmaidens and Battleaxes is one of those rare films which will actually make an impact upon public perception of an issue. The mere fact of its existence as testament is evidence of the release of the potential of nurses, so long suppressed and downgraded. The conceptual skills of female director and crew demonstrate, to me at least, that the feminist film can communicate complex ideas to a wide audience without lowering the filmic common denominator.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Handmaidens and Battleaxes is a 1990 documentary film, created by Rosalind Gillespie, about the evolving role of nurses.
|
2023-12-13T12:24:12Z
|
2023-12-13T12:24:12Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:IMDb title"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handmaidens_and_Battleaxes
|
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