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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen.
A fire gutted the roof and much of the interior of the church nave in 1990, the Soup Kitchen served 943 meals the next day. HASK has not missed a single serving day since its inception. Vastly improved accommodations made after the fire allow the hungry individuals coming for hot meals to eat in the nave of the church itself.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen.
By 2007, its 25th Anniversary, the Soup Kitchen had served more than 6 million meals. As of 2010, HASK has served over 6.8 million meals and serves currently on average over 1,200 meals each weekday (including holidays).
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. Services
Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen provides meals, Monday through Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The Soup Kitchen operates counseling and referrals services which help with other essential and basic needs by giving information as well as referrals to other organizations. About two dozen participants, recruited primarily from the Soup Kitchen line, enroll each spring.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. Recognition
HASK was honored with:
A proclamation from the Office of the Mayor of New York City in commemoration of its 20th Anniversary.
Proclamations from the City Council of New York, the Office of the Mayor, and a letter of commendation from the Office of the Governor of New York State in commemoration of its 25th Anniversary.
A proclamation from the Office of the Borough President in 2006.
A proclamation in 1999 from The Episcopal Diocese of New York, presenting HASK its Award for Exemplary Program.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. Visitors
Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen has drawn visitors throughout the years.
New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg
New York City Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum
United States Senator from New York Chuck Schumer
US Congressman from New York Anthony Weiner
New York State Senator Tom Duane
Susan Sarandon
United States Senator Jeff Sessions
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. References
www.holyapostlesnyc.org
Feuer, Alan (2009) "Where Hard Times Fuel Good Appetites", The New York Times, December 27, page 10.
Lombardi, Chris (June 6–12, 2008). "From Soup Kitchen to Synagogue church offers sacred refuge", Chelsea Now, Volume 2, Number 36.
Orndorff, Mary (2004) "Trip to Soup Kitchen feeds debate on services", Everything Alabama, September 1, 2004.
Singleton, Don (1990) "Church still 'serves'", Daily News, April 11, 1990, page 5.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Apostles%20Soup%20Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen
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Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. Christian charities
Christian relief organizations
Non-profit organizations based in New York City
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
Swansea City Ladies Football Club () is a women's football club based in Swansea, Wales, currently playing in the Women's Welsh Premier League and South Wales Ladies Football League. The team was crowned champions in the past two seasons (2019-20 and 2020-21).
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.. History
Formed in 2002, the team were members of the inaugural Welsh Premier Women's League in 2009/10 and came top of the Southern Conference, winning all six of their matches.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
This set up a meeting with Northern winners, Caernarfon Town Ladies, with the winner clinching the title and becoming Wales' representatives in the UEFA Women's Champions League.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
They beat the Canaries 4–0 at Haverfordwest to qualify for Europe for the very first time.
For the first time Swansea qualified to UEFA competitions in 2010 after winning the Welsh Premier League. As Wales is not in the top leagues by the UEFA coefficient for women, the team had to go through the qualifying stage of the UEFA Women's Champions League. Swansea City were drawn out in Group 5 and paired with ŽNK Krka (Slovenia) – who hosted the mini group – top seeds CF Bardolino Verona (Italy) and FC Baia Zugdidi (Georgia). Swansea achieved one win in its group, beating Baia Zugdidi 2–1 and ended the group on place 3 of 4, thus failing to move on to the knockout stages.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
They defended their title in 2011 again against Caernarfon with a 3–1 final win, thus would participate in the 2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
19 April 2015 Swansea Beat Cardiff City Women's 4–2 in the FAW Women's Cup.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
Thu 28 Apr 2016 Swansea beat PILCS in the Welsh Premier Women's League Cup 4–0.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
In the 2016/2017 they lost the first game of the season in a thrilling 5–4 contest at home to Abergavenny. They then went on to remain unbeaten the whole season, winning the league comfortably, and crowned champions after a 4–0 win against Cyncoed. Setting the girls up for a return to Europe. The girls headed to Cluj, Romania, where they played Hibernian, Olimpia Cluj and Zhytlobud-2.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C..
Returning home after Champions League, the women went on to secure second in the league after a tough campaign. They did win the FAW Cup, 2–1 with goals coming from Jodie Passmore and Katy Hosford to beat Cardiff City at the Cardiff City Stadium, bring the FAW cup home to Liberty Stadium in Swansea.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.. Honours
Welsh Premier Women's League:
Champions (5): 2009–10, 2010–11, 2016–17, 2019-20, 2020-21
Runners-up: 2014–15, 2015–16, 2017–18, 2018–19
Welsh Women's Cup:
Champions (3): 2011, 2015, 2018
Runners-up: 2014, 2017
Welsh Women's Premier League Cup:
Champions (1): 2016
Runners-up: 2015, 2019
South Wales Women's League
Champions: 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2011–12
South Wales Women's League Cup
Champions: 2007, 2008
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swansea%20City%20Ladies%20F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.
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Swansea City Ladies F.C.. Ladies
Women's football clubs in Wales
2002 establishments in Wales
Welsh Premier Women's Football League clubs
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27344680
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily%20Maguire
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Emily Maguire
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Emily Maguire. Emily Maguire may refer to:
Emily Maguire (singer) (born 1975), English singer-songwriter and musician
Emily Maguire (writer) (born 1976), Australian writer
Emily Maguire (field hockey), field hockey player
Emily Maguire (politician) (1873–1961), New Zealand community worker, politician and feminist
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27344711
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figaro-ci%2C%20Figaro-l%C3%A0
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Figaro-ci, Figaro-là
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Figaro-ci, Figaro-là.
Figaro-ci, Figaro-là is a 1972 French film directed by Hervé Bromberger.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figaro-ci%2C%20Figaro-l%C3%A0
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Figaro-ci, Figaro-là
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Figaro-ci, Figaro-là. Cast
Jean-François Poron - Beaumarchais
Marie-Christine Barrault - Julie
Yves Rénier - Gudin
Isabelle Huppert - Pauline
Alexandre Rignault - Caron, le père de Beaumarchais
Henri-Jacques Huet - Le duc de Chaulnes
Edmond Beauchamp - Paris-Duverney
Jacques Jansen - Le prince de Conti
André Oumansky - Sartines
Jacques Bernard - La Blache
Michèle André - Mme Franquet
Pierre Negre - Franquet (as Pierre Nègre)
Hubert de Lapparent - Goetzman
Michèle Moretti - Mme Goetzman
Fernand Guiot - Lepautre
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27344749
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey%20Mitin%20%28footballer%29
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Sergey Mitin (footballer)
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Sergey Mitin (footballer).
Sergey Anatolyevich Mitin (; born 3 June 1980) is a Russian former professional association football player.
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27344749
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey%20Mitin%20%28footballer%29
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Sergey Mitin (footballer)
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Sergey Mitin (footballer). Club career
He played in the Russian Premier League for three seasons for FC Krylia Sovetov Samara and FC Amkar Perm.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey%20Mitin%20%28footballer%29
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Sergey Mitin (footballer)
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Sergey Mitin (footballer). 1980 births
Living people
Russian footballers
Russian Premier League players
FC Krylia Sovetov Samara players
FC Amkar Perm players
FC Ural Yekaterinburg players
FC Salyut Belgorod players
FC Volgar Astrakhan players
FC Arsenal Tula players
Sportspeople from Kaluga
FC Lokomotiv Kaluga players
Association football midfielders
FC Novokuznetsk players
FC Tekstilshchik Ivanovo players
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27344771
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey%20Mitin
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Sergey Mitin
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Sergey Mitin. Sergey Mitin may refer to:
Sergey Anatolyevich Mitin (b. 1980), Russian footballer
Sergey Gerasimovich Mitin (b. 1951), Russian politician, governor of Novgorod Oblast
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27344799
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidna%20Allen%20House
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Sidna Allen House
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Sidna Allen House.
The Sidna Allen House is a historic house located near the town of Fancy Gap, in Carroll County, Virginia. The house was built in 1911 for Sidna Allen, brother of Floyd Allen; however, he was arrested soon thereafter for complicity in the courthouse shooting of which his brother was accused, and never again lived there.
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27344799
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidna%20Allen%20House
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Sidna Allen House
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Sidna Allen House.
On January 27, 1901, when Sidna Allen was 35 years old he married Bettie Mitchell. After Sidna and Bettie married, they decided to build a house. According to the book The Courthouse Tragedy, the whole house was made of the best wood around, and there were eight rooms in the house. In the book it says, "The floors were of oak, except the floor of our living room, which was white maple." The walls in the house were all plastered. It also says, "In the dining room we used quarter-sawed oak, finished in natural color wainscoting." The roof of the house was made of slate, which back then, all this wood and other materials were very expensive. They had a windmill at the house, and an acetylene generator which is what provided them the lights. The house back in 1911 was worth $13,000.00. But a year later the Hillsville courthouse massacre occurred. Sidna and his wife had only lived there a year.
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27344799
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidna%20Allen%20House
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Sidna Allen House
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Sidna Allen House.
The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
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27344799
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidna%20Allen%20House
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Sidna Allen House
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Sidna Allen House.
The house is owned by the Carroll County Historical Society and is currently closed for restoration, donated by the Widener family, Bonnie Wood and Stanley Widener.
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27344799
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidna%20Allen%20House
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Sidna Allen House
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Sidna Allen House. External links
J. Sidna Allen House Website
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Queen Anne architecture in Virginia
Houses completed in 1911
Houses in Carroll County, Virginia
National Register of Historic Places in Carroll County, Virginia
Museums in Carroll County, Virginia
Historic house museums in Virginia
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27344807
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
Leonard William Chapple Sharland LTh MA (1904–1978) was a pioneer missionary amongst the Dinka people with the Gordon Memorial Mission of the Church Missionary Society (CMS) in southern Sudan in the middle of the 20th century.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland. Early life
Leonard Sharland was born on 30 August 1904 in Well Street, Exeter and moved with the family at and early age to Camperdown Terrace, Exmouth, Devon. He was from a Devonian family which for many generations had lived in Morchard Bishop. His parents William and Ethel Sharland moved from Exeter to Exmouth not long after Leonard was born. The family then moved to a terraced house in Clifford Road, Wallasey, Cheshire, in 1911. Leonard left school at 14 years old during the 1st World War to work as an office boy for an estate agent.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
Despite leaving school so young, Leonard studied in the evenings and was admitted to St Aidan's Theological College, Birkenhead, where he obtained a Licentiate of Theology in 1929. He then went on to complete a master's degree at St John's College, Durham. He was the first member of the family to go on to further education.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland. Ordination and Curacies
Leonard was ordained a deacon 1930, and ordained Priest in 1931 in Chester. He was curate of Christ Church Macclesfield from 1930. During this time he was very active in work with youth, and followed his calling to become a missionary.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland. A Missionary in Sudan
In 1931 Leonard's brother, Charles Sharland, who was a cabinet maker, went out to southern Sudan to Loka and to start a trade school in Lainya, west of Juba. Two years later Leonard followed him.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
Leonard joined the Gordon Memorial Sudan Mission of the Church Missionary Society (CMS) and left for Sudan in 1934. His first station was at Malek, on the banks of the River Nile where he served a sort of apprenticeship under the original pioneer missionary of the mission in Sudan, Archdeacon Shaw. He spent a time acting as headmaster in Nugent School Loka, but his main work was amongst the cattle keeping Dinka people. He worked at the mission stations at Akot, Gel River and Panekar, finally ending his time with the mission in Rumbek, where he saw the rapid changes as Sudan gained independence. As an ordained minister he had a central pastoral ministry, but was also very involved in education, and a certain amount of building. He was described as "one of these rare men who can be appointed to educational, eveangelistic or pioneer missionary work and generally combines the three together". He was made a Canon of Khartoum Cathedral in 1951. Leonard returned from leave in England in 1951 with a wife and when he left in 1958 had three sons.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
From 1946-1955 Leonard was the field editor of the ‘Southern Sudan Mailbag’ which brought news, mostly in the form of letters, from members of the Gordon Memorial Sudan Mission.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland. A Clergyman in England
After returning to England from Sudan in 1958, Leonard spent a year in Limpsfield, Surrey working on manuscript of the Bible translated into the Dinka language. At the end of 1959 he took up the post of Vicar at St Faith's, Maidstone, a busy town centre church. After ten years there he moved to a country parish as Rector of St Mary's, Hardington Mandeville, near Yeovil, Somerset.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
When he retired in 1976 Leonard returned with his family to his roots in Devon to Lympstone, just outside Exmouth where he was born. He died on 5 Feb 1978 at a mission conference at Lee Abbey, Lynton, North Devon.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland. Family
Leonard Sharland married Faith Streatfeild (1915–2002) in 1951 in her home town of Westerham Kent. She was also a missionary with the same mission in Sudan and came from an old Kentish family. Two of her aunts had also been missionaries in Uganda and China.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
Leonard and Faith had four sons, Peter (born 1952), Roger (born 1953), Andrew (born 1956) and David (born 1959). Two of the sons, Roger and David, and his grandson Emmanuel have been missionaries in Sudan.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard%20Sharland
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Leonard Sharland
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Leonard Sharland.
His eldest son Colonel Peter Roland Sharland, late of The Light Infantry, was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in The New Year Honours 2006.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Mills%20%28Medal%20of%20Honor%29
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor)
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor).
Charles Mills (September 1, 1840 – unknown) was a U.S. sailor stationed aboard the during the American Civil War. He received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Second Battle of Fort Fisher on January 15, 1865.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Mills%20%28Medal%20of%20Honor%29
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor)
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor). Military service
Mills volunteered for service in the U.S. Navy and was assigned to the Union steam frigate . His enlistment is credited to the state of New York.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Mills%20%28Medal%20of%20Honor%29
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor)
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor).
On January 15, 1865 the North Carolina Confederate stronghold of Fort Fisher was taken by a combined Union storming party of sailors, marines, and soldiers under the command of Admiral David Dixon Porter and General Alfred Terry. Mills was one of nine crewmen from the USS Minnesota who received the Medal of Honor for gallantry in this action.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Mills%20%28Medal%20of%20Honor%29
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor)
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor). Medal of Honor citation
For The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to Seaman Charles Mills, United States Navy, for extraordinary heroism in action while serving on board the U.S.S. Minnesota, in action during the assault on Fort Fisher, North Carolina, 15 January 1865. Landing on the beach with the assaulting party from his ship, Seaman Mills charged up to the palisades and, when more than two thirds of the men became seized with panic and retreated on the run, risked his life to remain with a wounded officer. With the enemy concentrating his fire on the group, he waited until after dark before assisting the wounded man from the field.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Mills%20%28Medal%20of%20Honor%29
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor)
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Charles Mills (Medal of Honor).
General Orders: War Department, General Orders No. 59 (June 22, 1865)
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27344812
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Joseph%20Kaniecki
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Michael Joseph Kaniecki
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Michael Joseph Kaniecki.
Michael Joseph Kaniecki, SJ (April 13, 1935 – August 6, 2000) was a 20th-century bishop in the Catholic Church in the United States. He served as Bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks from 1985–2000.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Joseph%20Kaniecki
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Michael Joseph Kaniecki
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Michael Joseph Kaniecki.
Born in Detroit, Michigan, Kaniecki had professed religious vows as a Jesuit, and was ordained a Catholic priest on June 5, 1965. On March 8, 1984 Pope John Paul II named him to be the Coadjutor Bishop of Fairbanks. He was consecrated on May 1, 1984, by Bishop Robert Louis Whelan, SJ of Fairbanks. The co-consecrators were Archbishop Francis Thomas Hurley of Anchorage and Bishop Michael Hughes Kenny of Juneau. He succeeded to the See of Fairbanks on June 1, 1985, when Bishop Whelan resigned as the diocesan bishop, and was installed on July 28, 1985. He served the diocese for a total of 16 years. He died suddenly on August 6, 2000, of a massive heart attack before celebrating a Mass in the Eskimo village of Emmonak, Alaska.
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27344814
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me%C4%91u%20zvezdama
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Među zvezdama
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Među zvezdama.
Među zvezdama (trans. Among the Stars) is the fourth studio album from Serbian and former Yugoslav rock band YU Grupa.
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27344814
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me%C4%91u%20zvezdama
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Među zvezdama
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Među zvezdama.
Među zvezdama is the band's first album recorded with the guitarist Nedžat Maculja and the drummer Dragan Micić, who replaced Ratislav Đelmaš. The album features the band's former member Bata Kostić as guest.
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27344814
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me%C4%91u%20zvezdama
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Među zvezdama
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Među zvezdama. Personnel
Dragi Jelić - guitar, vocals
Žika Jelić - bass guitar
Nedžat Maculja - guitar
Dragan Micić - drums
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27344814
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me%C4%91u%20zvezdama
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Među zvezdama
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Među zvezdama. Additional personnel
Siniša Škarica - producer
Franjo Berner - engineer
Mladen Rukavec - engineer
Branko Podbrežnički - recorded by
Danko Polić - design
Zoran Kršljanin - photography
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27344814
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me%C4%91u%20zvezdama
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Među zvezdama
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Među zvezdama. References
EX YU ROCK enciklopedija 1960-2006, Janjatović Petar;
Među zvezdama at Discogs
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27344815
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny%20Bew
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Danny Bew
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Danny Bew.
Daniel Crombie Bew (1896 – 1951) was an English footballer. He played in The Football League for Hull City and Swindon Town.
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27344847
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kojak%3A%20The%20Price%20of%20Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice.
Kojak: The Price of Justice is a 1987 made-for-television film based on the 1973–1978 TV series Kojak, starring Telly Savalas as Theo Kojak.
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27344847_0_1
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27344847
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kojak%3A%20The%20Price%20of%20Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice. Plot
Kojak is on a new case, the bodies of two young boys are found in the Harlem river. Their mother (Kate Nelligan) is the main obvious suspect, particularly with her scandalous past, but Kojak believes that she is innocent. Soon afterward the boys' father (Pat Hingle) kills himself. Kojak and his new assistant (John Bedford Lloyd) have to sort things out and solve the case which isn't going to be as straightforward a task as it seems.
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27344847
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kojak%3A%20The%20Price%20of%20Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice
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Kojak: The Price of Justice. Cast and characters
Kate Nelligan as Kitty
Pat Hingle as George
Jack Thompson as Aubrey Dubose
Brian Murray as District Attorney Neary
John Bedford Lloyd as Bass
Jeffrey DeMunn as Marsucci
Tony DiBenedetto as Detective Catalano
Ron Frazier as J.T. Williams
Stephen Joyce as Chief Brisco
Earl Hindman as Danny
James Rebhorn as Quibro
Martin Shakar as Arnold Nadler
Joseph Carberry as Lorenzo
Fausto Bara as Benjamin
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27344861_0_0
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27344861
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad%20Heidari
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Mohammad Heidari
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Mohammad Heidari.
Mohammad Heidari (born May 26, 1986) is an Iranian footballer who plays for Saba Qom in the IPL.
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27344861_0_1
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27344861
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad%20Heidari
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Mohammad Heidari
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Mohammad Heidari. Club career
Heidari had played his entire career with Malavan, until he moved to Fajr Sepasi in the summer of 2013.
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27344876_0_0
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
|
Aban Pearl.
The Aban Pearl was a twin-hull, column-stabilized, semi-submersible offshore drilling rig owned and operated by Aban Offshore drilling company. It is registered in Singapore. In 2009, the Aban Pearl became the first offshore gas rig operated by the Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA. In May 2010, the rig sank into the sea though all workers aboard at the time were saved.
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27344876_0_1
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
|
Aban Pearl. Background
The Aban Pearl was designed by Aker H-3 and was built in 1977 by Far East Levingston Shipbuilding (now part of the Keppel Corporation) at the Levingston Singapore shipyard. The Aban Pearl could operate at a rated water depth of and she had a drilling depth of .
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27344876_0_2
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
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Aban Pearl. History
In 1977–1996, she was named Transocean Seeker, in 1996 Treasure Seeker and in 1996–2000 Transocean Discoverer. All this time she was owned by Transocean. In 2000–2007, she was named Bulford Dolphin and operated under the Bahamas flag. The Bulford Dolphin was purchased for US$43.27 million by Bonheur ASA and Ganger Rolf ASA. The rig was operated by Dolphin Drilling, a subsidiary of Fred. Olsen Energy.
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27344876_0_3
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
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Aban Pearl. Incidents
In 2006, while contracted by the Nigerian oil company Peak Petroleum, the rig was attacked near Nigeria by Nigerian militants and eight of the personnel on the rig were kidnapped. They were released unharmed after two days in captivity. In 2007, the rig was purchased by the Indian drilling company Aban for US$211 million.
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27344876_0_4
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
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Aban Pearl.
In 2009, the rig was contracted under a five-year contract for PDVSA for drilling natural gas wells on the Mariscal Sucre complex off the coast of northeastern Venezuela in the Caribbean Sea. In August 2009 en route from Trinidad and Tobago to Venezuela its flotation devices took on water in heavy seas about south-west of Point Baline, Gaspar Grande, Trinidad and Tobago and there was a call to evacuate the platform.
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27344876_0_5
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27344876
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aban%20Pearl
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Aban Pearl
|
Aban Pearl.
On 13 May 2010 at 2:20 a.m. (0650 GMT), when drilling at the Dragon 6 gas field, scheduled to come on stream by 2012, the rig sank in the deep about after water entered a subsea pontoon. All 95 crew members were evacuated from the rig to the nearby drilling ship Neptune Discoverer. According to the Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez, the well being explored by the Aban Pearl had been safely sealed. There are plans to try to retrieve the rig. The rig was one of the company's biggest money earners bringing in about $358,000 dollars, or about 10.5 million rupees a day. The insurance claim of $235 million was settled in July 2010.
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27344878_0_0
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27344878
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basie%20Jam%202
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Basie Jam 2
|
Basie Jam 2.
Basie Jam 2 is a 1976 studio album by Count Basie, the follow-up to 1973's Basie Jam.
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27344878_0_1
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27344878
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basie%20Jam%202
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Basie Jam 2
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Basie Jam 2. Track listing
"Mama Don't Wear No Drawers" (Count Basie, Benny Carter, Clark Terry) – 12:33
"Doggin' Around" (Edgar Battle, Herschel Evans) – 10:59
"Kansas City Line" (Count Basie, Louie Bellson, Benny Carter, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Al Grey, John Heard, Joe Pass, Clark Terry) – 14:57
"Jump" (Basie, Carter, J.J. Johnson, Terry) – 9:59
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27344878
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basie%20Jam%202
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Basie Jam 2
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Basie Jam 2. Personnel
Count Basie - piano
Benny Carter - alto saxophone
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis - tenor saxophone
Al Grey - trombone
Clark Terry - trumpet
Joe Pass - guitar
John Heard - double bass
Louie Bellson - drums
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27344907_0_0
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27344907
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eston%20Grange%20Power%20Station
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Eston Grange Power Station
|
Eston Grange Power Station.
Eston Grange Power Station (officially known as Eston Grange Power Project) is a proposed power station, that is to be situated near to Eston in Redcar and Cleveland. If built would be the UK's first pre-combustion carbon capture and storage (CCS) plant. The station could generate up to 850 megawatts of electricity, enough to supply around a million people with electricity. The station would use standard oil refinery technology to turn gasified coal into hydrogen and carbon dioxide.
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27344907_0_1
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27344907
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eston%20Grange%20Power%20Station
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Eston Grange Power Station
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Eston Grange Power Station. Development
The station would be built on a brownfield site, and use integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) technology to generate electricity. The CCS technology used in the power station would be of the pre-combustion type, capturing approximately 5 million tonnes of CO2 per year. The CO2 would be transported via a 225 km pipeline to saline formations, the pipeline being oversized to allow for use by other emitters. This is planned to include Lynemouth power station as part of the North CCS Cluster. Both projects would share a common pipeline for the transport of CO2, and use the same offshore storage site in the North Sea. There would be the possibility of other emitters joining this network in the future. The Eston Grange project is planned for commercial operation by 2015.
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27344907_1_0
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27344907
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eston%20Grange%20Power%20Station
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Eston Grange Power Station
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Eston Grange Power Station. Coal-fired power stations in England
Power stations in North East England
Proposed power stations in England
Proposed coal-fired power stations
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27344919_0_0
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27344919
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett%20S.%20Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham
|
Bartlett S. Durham.
Dr. Bartlett Leonidas Snipes Durham (November 3, 1824 – February 2, 1859) was an American physician and entrepreneur whose land, donated for a railway station, became the location of Durham, North Carolina, named for him.
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27344919_0_1
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27344919
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett%20S.%20Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham. Biography
Bartlett S. Durham was born and raised roughly west of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in rural Orange County. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, he returned to Orange County and, in 1847 or 1848, purchased of undeveloped land in the eastern portion of the county, between settlements known as Prattsburg and Pinhook, likely as a speculative investment, in advance of the planned North Carolina Railroad. In 1849, Durham donated , directly adjacent to his estate, "Pandora's Box", to the railroad. The railroad, in turn, named the stop, Durham's Station in his honor.
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27344919
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett%20S.%20Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham.
The collection of stores and houses a mile to the west of Prattsburg became "Durhamville" and the site of the new station by the early 1850s. Shortly thereafter, Durham became the first railroad agent in the vicinity of Durhamville, with a liquor license and a stake in the general store. At some point during the early 1850s, Durham was elected to represent Orange County in the North Carolina General Assembly, having introduced a bill to form a chapter of the Sons of Temperance.
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27344919_0_3
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27344919
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett%20S.%20Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham.
Bartlett Durham died from pneumonia on February 2, 1859. Ten years later, fueled by the post-Civil War tobacco boom, the North Carolina General Assembly incorporated Durham on the site of the railway station named in his honor. Twelve years after that, the eastern portion of Orange County and the western tip of Wake County were combined to form Durham County.
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27344919
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartlett%20S.%20Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham
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Bartlett S. Durham. Final resting place
Durham was laid to rest in a windowed iron coffin in an unmarked grave on the grounds of Antioch Cemetery in Orange County, wearing "gold-rimmed" glasses. Shortly after Durham County was formed, Julian S. Carr began a public campaign advocating the exhumation and reburial of Bartlett Durham's remains within his namesake city. Nearly a decade after Carr himself had died, Durham officials exhumed the coffin on June 27, 1933, with Mayor W.F. Carr and County Commissioner John Harris officially accepting the remains for the city and county. It was transported to Hall-Wynne Funeral Home, where it lay in state for several days. Reburial took place Jan. 2, 1934, in Maplewood Cemetery, under a marker that lists incorrect middle name, and erroneous dates of birth and death.
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27344957_0_0
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27344957
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham%20Sabers
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Birmingham Sabers
|
Birmingham Sabers.
The Birmingham Sabers were a team of the Continental Basketball League based in Birmingham, Alabama that began play in 2010
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27344957_0_1
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27344957
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham%20Sabers
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Birmingham Sabers
|
Birmingham Sabers.
The team was born when the Birmingham Steel moved to the WBA. The CBL commissioner, Dennis Truax, announced that Paul Smith would take over as owner of the Birmingham franchise. Several Steel players stayed with the Sabers, who also retained the team records and statistics of the Steel.
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27344957_1_0
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27344957
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birmingham%20Sabers
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Birmingham Sabers
|
Birmingham Sabers. Continental Basketball League teams
Sports teams in Birmingham, Alabama
Basketball teams in Alabama
Basketball teams established in 2010
2010 establishments in Alabama
Sports clubs disestablished in 2011
2011 disestablishments in Alabama
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27344969_0_0
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27344969
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%C3%A9phanie
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Stéphanie
|
Stéphanie.
Stéphanie is a feminine French feminine given name. Notable people with the name include:
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27344969_0_1
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27344969
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%C3%A9phanie
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Stéphanie
|
Stéphanie.
Stéphanie, Hereditary Grand Duchess of Luxembourg (born 1984), Belgian noble; wife of Guillaume, Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg
Princess Stéphanie (disambiguation), several people
Stéphanie Arricau (born 1973), French golfer
Stéphanie Atger (born 1975), French politician
Stéphanie Blake (born 1968), author of children's stories
Stéphanie Bouvier (born 1981), short track speed-skater
Stéphanie de Beauharnais (1789–1860), consort of Karl, Grand Duke of Baden
Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro (born 1983), French tennis player
Stéphanie Dixon (born 1984), Canadian swimmer
Stéphanie Dubois (born 1986), Canadian tennis player
Stéphanie Falzon (born 1983), French hammer thrower
Stéphanie Félicité du Crest de Saint-Aubin (1746–1830), French writer and educator
Stéphanie Foretz (born 1981), French tennis player
Stéphanie Jiménez (born 1974), Andorran mountain runner
Stéphanie Lapointe (born 1984), Canadian singer, songwriter, and actress
Stéphanie Mbanzendore, Burundian feminist activist
Stéphanie Moisdon (born 1967), French curator and art critic
Stéphanie Possamaï (born 1980), French judoka
Stéphanie St-Pierre (born 1985), Canadian freestyle skier
Stéphanie Vallée, Canadian politician, lawyer and negotiator
Stéphanie Vongsouthi (born 1988), French tennis player
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27344979_0_0
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer).
József Molnár (27 August 1918, Budapest, Hungary 1 December 2009, Munich, Germany) was a Hungarian writer, journalist, publisher and printer.
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27344979_0_1
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Biography
His mother, Mária Lagler (1886–1943), worked in Budapest as a cook, his biological father is unknown. József grew up in Csepreg with relatives of his mother. He bore his mother's maiden name and was called József Lagler until the age of fourteen when he was adopted by Jenő Molnár. He attended the Kossuth Lajos Grammar School in Budapest.
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27344979_0_2
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer).
On 1 December 1938, he became a member of the Social Democratic Party of Hungary. In 1945 he joined the National Peasant Party (Nemzeti Parasztpárt) and was elected to their executive committee. In 1947 he resigned from the party and left Hungary in November 1948. From then on he lived in exile. After arriving in Switzerland, in the summer of 1949 he earned his living in various companies as a labourer. In the further course of his emigration, József Molnár worked for several years as a political commentator at Radio Free Europe. He went on to New York and back again to Europe.
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27344979_0_3
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Family
In 1955 he met Olga Leibold, his future second wife. It was a conversation about the novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder. The couple wed in September 1965 and remained together until József's death. His cremated remains are located at the Munich East Cemetery.
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27344979_1_0
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Work
In 1950, József Molnár joined a group of Hungarian exiles, who founded a journal of literature and politics,
Látóhatár, and renamed again in 1958 as Új Látóhatár (New Horizon). He founded a printing company in Munich, where the magazine was produced over decades of outstanding quality. He was the spiritus rector of the magazine until the publication of last issue in December 1989. From 1963, he published numerous books of Hungarian authors in his publishing house Aurora. In 1997, Molnár was honored for his life's work with the Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary.
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27344979_1_1
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Work
He viewed himself as "a servant of letters". He spent years doing research on the Hungarian punchcutter Miklós Kis (1650–1702), and created Misztótfalusi Kis Miklós Múzeumi Alapítvány. He founded the museum in Misztótfalu, which was inaugurated and opened to the public on 8 September 1991. He was a founding member of the Academia Musicae Pro Mundo Uno in Rome. The Academia was founded in 1978 by József Juhar (a Hungarian theologian and music expert). Juhar and Molnár remained lifelong friends.
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27344979_1_2
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Awards
1991 Pro Cultura Hungarica Plaquette
1991 Bethlen Gábor Prize
1994 Nagy Imre Memorial Award
1997 Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Hungarian Republic
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27344979_1_3
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). Bibliography
1996 Tanulmányok a magyar forradalomról ()
2000 Misztótfalusi Kis Miklós ()
2002 Áchim L. András élete és halála ()
2002 A betű szolgálatában. Negyven év az Új Látóhatárért és a nyugati magyar irodalomért. Válogatott írások ()
2006 Radio Free Europe in the days of the revolution ()
2009 Életem (Autobiography by József Molnár) ()
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27344979_2_0
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). External links
Website „Remember József Molnár“ (Photos)
Death notice József Molnár (German/Hungarian)
Látóhatár – Új Látóhatár (Hungarian)
Academia Musicae Pro Mundo Uno
Research report Kis Miklós (German)
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27344979
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef%20Moln%C3%A1r%20%28writer%29
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József Molnár (writer)
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József Molnár (writer). 1918 births
2009 deaths
Writers from Budapest
Social Democratic Party of Hungary politicians
National Peasant Party (Hungary) politicians
Hungarian journalists
Hungarian essayists
Male essayists
Hungarian male writers
Officer's Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary (civil)
Hungarian expatriates in Switzerland
Hungarian expatriates in Germany
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty people
20th-century Hungarian people
20th-century essayists
20th-century journalists
Hungarian expatriates in the United States
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27344991_0_0
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27344991
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensanche%20Sur
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Ensanche Sur
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Ensanche Sur.
Ensanche Sur de Alcorcón is a new neighbourhood, currently under construction, placed on the South of Alcorcón (Madrid, Spain). It borders on the South with the city of Fuenlabrada and on the South-East with the city of Móstoles. The total area is 1,981,469 m2, including 500,000 m2 for green zones, and around 300,000 m2 for social public purposes.
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27344991
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensanche%20Sur
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Ensanche Sur
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Ensanche Sur.
It will have around 6,000 subsidized houses, and around 1,000 houses with public prices for rental. This supposes the 85% of the total number of houses constructed in this place. All the houses have been designed based on bioclimatic architecture criteria.
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27344991
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensanche%20Sur
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Ensanche Sur
|
Ensanche Sur. See also
Neighbourhood association
Forums with discussions about Ensanche Sur
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27344994_0_0
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27344994
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radek%20Slon%C4%8D%C3%ADk
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Radek Slončík
|
Radek Slončík.
Radek Slončík (born 29 May 1973) is a Czech former football player.
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27344994_0_1
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27344994
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radek%20Slon%C4%8D%C3%ADk
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Radek Slončík
|
Radek Slončík.
Slončík played in the position of midfielder-playmaker. He spent most of his career at Baník Ostrava. In 2000, he moved to Sparta Prague, but he was not very successful and returned to Baník the next season. He was a squad member in Baník Ostrava's 2003-2004 championship season. In 2005, he won the Czech Cup with Baník.
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27344994_0_2
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27344994
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radek%20Slon%C4%8D%C3%ADk
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Radek Slončík
|
Radek Slončík.
After the 2010/2011 season, Slončík retired from professional football.
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27344994_1_0
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27344994
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radek%20Slon%C4%8D%C3%ADk
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Radek Slončík
|
Radek Slončík. Czech footballers
Czech Republic under-21 international footballers
Czech Republic international footballers
Czech First League players
1973 births
Living people
FC Baník Ostrava players
AC Sparta Prague players
Újpest FC players
Expatriate footballers in Hungary
Association football midfielders
People from Šumperk
Fotbal Fulnek players
MFK Karviná players
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27345011_0_0
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27345011
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basie%20Jam%203
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Basie Jam 3
|
Basie Jam 3.
Basie Jam 3 is a 1976 studio album by Count Basie, produced at the same sessions as Basie Jam 2.
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