id
stringlengths 9
15
| page_id
stringlengths 5
8
| page_url
stringlengths 31
312
| page_title
stringlengths 1
218
| text
stringlengths 21
2k
|
---|---|---|---|---|
27322600_0_1 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture).
Architectural improvements over 65-nanometer Core 2 CPUs include a new divider with reduced latency, a new shuffle engine, and SSE4.1 instructions (some of which are enabled by the new single-cycle shuffle engine). |
27322600_0_2 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture).
Maximum L2 cache size per chip was increased from 4 to 6 MB, with L2 associativity increased from 16-way to 24-way. Cut-down versions with 3 MB L2 also exist, which are commonly called Penryn-3M and Wolfdale-3M as well as Yorkfield-6M, respectively. The single-core version of Penryn, listed as Penryn-L here, is not a separate model like Merom-L but a version of the Penryn-3M model with only one active core. |
27322600_1_0 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture). Processor cores
The processors of the Core microarchitecture can be categorized by number of cores, cache size, and socket; each combination of these has a unique code name and product code that is used across a number of brands. For instance, code name "Allendale" with product code 80557 has two cores, 2 MB L2 cache and uses the desktop socket 775, but has been marketed as Celeron, Pentium, Core 2 and Xeon, each with different sets of features enabled. Most of the mobile and desktop processors come in two variants that differ in the size of the L2 cache, but the specific amount of L2 cache in a product can also be reduced by disabling parts at production time.
Wolfdale-DP and all quad-core processors except Dunnington QC are multi-chip modules combining two dies. For the 65 nm processors, the same product code can be shared by processors with different dies, but the specific information about which one is used can be derived from the stepping. |
27322600_2_0 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture). Steppings using 45 nm process
In the model 23 (cpuid 01067xh), Intel started marketing stepping with full (6 MB) and reduced (3 MB) L2 cache at the same time, and giving them identical cpuid values. All steppings have the new SSE4.1 instructions. Stepping C1/M1 was a bug fix version of C0/M0 specifically for quad core processors and only used in those. Stepping E0/R0 adds two new instructions (XSAVE/XRSTOR) and replaces all earlier steppings. |
27322600_2_1 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture). Steppings using 45 nm process
In mobile processors, stepping C0/M0 is only used in the Intel Mobile 965 Express (Santa Rosa refresh) platform, whereas stepping E0/R0 supports the later Intel Mobile 4 Express (Montevina) platform. |
27322600_2_2 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture). Steppings using 45 nm process
Model 29 stepping A1 (cpuid 106d1h) adds an L3 cache as well as six instead of the usual two cores, which leads to an unusually large die size of 503 mm². As of February 2008, it has only found its way into the very high-end Xeon 7400 series (Dunnington). |
27322600_3_0 | 27322600 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penryn%20%28microarchitecture%29 | Penryn (microarchitecture) | Penryn (microarchitecture). See also
x86 architecture
List of Intel CPU microarchitectures
Tick-Tock model |
27322643_0_0 | 27322643 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Hope%20%28British%20Army%20officer%29 | Charles Hope (British Army officer) | Charles Hope (British Army officer).
Charles Hope (16 October 1768 – 1 July 1828) was a British general and politician. |
27322643_0_1 | 27322643 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Hope%20%28British%20Army%20officer%29 | Charles Hope (British Army officer) | Charles Hope (British Army officer).
He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Dysart Burghs from 1790 to 1796. |
27322643_0_2 | 27322643 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Hope%20%28British%20Army%20officer%29 | Charles Hope (British Army officer) | Charles Hope (British Army officer).
On 12 May 1800, he was elected as MP for Haddingtonshire. He resigned from Parliament on 21 March 1816, accepting the stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds. |
27322653_0_0 | 27322653 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human%20Rights%20%28journal%29 | Human Rights (journal) | Human Rights (journal).
Human Rights was an abolitionist journal founded by Lewis Tappan. The journal was first published in July 1835. The last issue appeared in February 1839. It was published monthly by the American Anti Slavery Society. |
27322656_0_0 | 27322656 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trichopeza | Trichopeza | Trichopeza.
Trichopeza is a genus of empidoid flies. They are mainly predatory flies like most of their relatives, and generally small to medium-sized, long-legged and large-eyed. |
27322656_0_1 | 27322656 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trichopeza | Trichopeza | Trichopeza. Species
T. albocincta (Boheman, 1846)
T. chaomek (Plant, 2009)
T. longicornis (Meigen, 1822)
T. milleri Smith, 1989
T. pia (Plant, 2009)
T. taiwanensis Yang & Horvat, 2006 |
27322689_0_0 | 27322689 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aco%20Karamanov | Aco Karamanov | Aco Karamanov.
Aco Karamanov (; ) (January 31, 1927 - October 7, 1944) was a Macedonian poet and partisan. In Bulgaria he is considered Bulgarian. |
27322689_0_1 | 27322689 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aco%20Karamanov | Aco Karamanov | Aco Karamanov.
Karamanov was born in Radoviš, then in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Since the beginning of his education he exhibited affinity to writing, He started writing songs at the early age of 9 years. Between September 5, and October 7, 1944 Karamanov fought against the withdrawing Germans. |
27322689_0_2 | 27322689 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aco%20Karamanov | Aco Karamanov | Aco Karamanov.
This talented writer lived for only 17 years, but his human messages written in poems are left to testify for the war. He is considered one of the founders of contemporary Macedonian literature. His poetry was originally written in Serbo-Croatian and Bulgarian, and was translated into Macedonian after its codification in 1945. According to the Bulgarian literary critic and politician Alexander Yordanov, part of the works of the poet, has not been translated into Macedonian, due to its bulgarophile content. |
27322689_0_3 | 27322689 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aco%20Karamanov | Aco Karamanov | Aco Karamanov.
The town of Radoviš holds each year in his honor a poetry festival "Aco Karamanov Poetry Meetings" |
27322689_1_0 | 27322689 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aco%20Karamanov | Aco Karamanov | Aco Karamanov. 1927 births
1944 deaths
People from Radoviš
Macedonian poets
Bulgarian poets
Yugoslav communists
Yugoslav Partisans members
20th-century poets |
27322690_0_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend.
The Slave's Friend (1836-1838) was an anti-slavery magazine for children produced by the American Anti-Slavery Society (AASS). The short-lived magazine was the first abolitionist magazine targeted to a juvenile audience in the United States. |
27322690_1_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Background
The American Anti-Slavery Society (AASS), established in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan, was one of the leading abolitionist organizations in the United States during the first half of the 19th Century. In June 1835 the AASS planned the launch of an array of publications to advance its anti-slavery agenda. These were to include three adult periodicals —The Emancipator, Human Rights, The Anti Slavery Record — as well as a monthly for young readers, The Slave's Friend. |
27322690_1_1 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Background
While these publications were to be available by subscription, free distribution was also planned, both in the free states of the North and the slave-owning states of the South. To this end, donations were solicited for the launch of the new periodicals, and some $30,000 was quickly raised. |
27322690_2_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Launch
In 1836 the first issue of the children's magazine of the AASS, The Slave's Friend, saw print. With a view to producing a periodical that could be comfortably handled by diminutive readers, a small physical format was used for the magazine. A readership ranging in age from 6 to 12 appears to have been targeted by the editors. |
27322690_2_1 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Launch
The magazine included a mix of original anti-slavery writing, poetry, and reprints of relevant material from other popular periodicals of the day. Each issue of the publication included woodcut illustrations, which typically revolved around the theme of the cruelty and abuse which inevitably accompanied forced physical servitude. These depictions of beatings and the implements of violence were frequently contrasted to other happier images of black and white children attending school and playing together. |
27322690_2_2 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Launch
The Slave's Friend was an inexpensive publication, with a nominal price of just one cent per issue listed on the cover. Some 200,000 issues of The Slave's Friend were distributed during the first year of the magazine's existence, with an additional sale of 5,000 bound volumes. |
27322690_3_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Ideology
The Slave's Friend was highly moralistic, equating slavery with sinfulness and making a strong religious appeal to its young readers. The love and respect of parents was also propagandized as a core value. The abolitionist cause was consistently depicted in pacifist and humanitarian terms rather than an objective to be obtained through forcible struggle. All violent methods were foresworn and abolitionist activists described as "peacemakers." |
27322690_3_1 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Ideology
The publication made an effort to inculcate respectful language towards blacks among its targeted white readership. The 7th issue (1836) included a set of specific suggestions for appropriate discourse: |
27322690_3_2 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. RESOLUTIONS.
With God's help I resolve,
1. Never to call a colored person A NEGRO. They do not like to be called so; and they think it is calling names.
2. Never to call a colored person, that BLACK FELLOW, or BLACKEY, or DARKEY. It is insulting to call them so.
3. Never to call a colored man a BOY. This is often done, and it is insulting and foolish.
4. To speak to colored people, and of them, just as I do to and of white people.
5. Always to have respectful and kind feelings toward colored people. |
27322690_4_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Development and demise
Circulation tailed off somewhat during the second year of The Slave's Friend, with a total of just over 130,000 copies circulated for the year — an average of just under 11,000 copies per issue. These figures were roughly comparable to another magazine from the AASS stable, The Anti-Slavery Record. |
27322690_4_1 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Development and demise
Efforts were made to establish a network of juvenile anti-slavery clubs by the AASS, and The Slave's Friend gave coverage in its pages to such efforts. A sample constitution was published in the magazine's pages and membership dues of one cent per month were suggested. Fundraising from adults to help subsidize the production of anti-slavery literature was given as one of the primary tasks of such children's organizations. |
27322690_4_2 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Development and demise
A total of 38 numbers of the magazine were produced, with the final issue of the publication in 1838 assigned Volume IV, Number 2. It is believed that financial problems were the primary reason for the magazine's demise. The entire press of the American Anti-Slavery Society folded by the end of the decade of the 1830s and the organization itself virtually disappeared. |
27322690_5_0 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Further reading
Christopher D. Geist, "The Slave's Friend: An Abolitionist Magazine for Children," American Periodicals, vol. 9 (1999), pp. 27–35. In JSTOR
Gilbert H. Harnes, The Anti-Slavery Impulse, 1830-1844. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1973.
W. Sherman Savage, The Controversy Over the Distribution of Abolition Literature, 1830-1860. Washington, DC: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1938.
Stephen L. Vaughn, (editor) "The Slave's Friend," in Encyclopedia of American Journalism. Routledge, 2009; pg. 5. |
27322690_5_1 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. External links
"The Slave's Friend: Children's Literature," Teach US History.org, www.teachushistory.org/ —Includes links to full issues. |
27322690_5_2 | 27322690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Slave%27s%20Friend | The Slave's Friend | The Slave's Friend. Further reading
Children's magazines published in the United States
Defunct magazines published in the United States
Magazines established in 1836
Magazines disestablished in 1838
Magazines published in Pennsylvania
Mass media in Philadelphia
Monthly magazines published in the United States
American Anti-Slavery Society |
27322734_0_0 | 27322734 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therapeutic%20discovery%20project | Therapeutic discovery project | Therapeutic discovery project.
The Qualifying Therapeutic Discovery Project Tax Credit was included in the Health Care Reform Bill to foster medical, life sciences, and biological innovation in the U.S. Many firms across the country could potentially be eligible for a Credit or Grant under this program. The Bill enables Treasury to allocate a maximum of $1 Billion in tax credits or grants to eligible companies. Treasury with guidance from Health & Human Services will accept, review, and certify applications. Potentially eligible companies should consult with their respective tax professionals to assess eligibility. |
27322745_0_0 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata.
Mopalia ciliata is a chiton in the genus Mopalia, commonly known as the hairy chiton. It is a medium-sized marine mollusc up to 5.0 cm in length. It is oval shaped with 8 separate moderately elevated, overlapping ridged valves on its dorsal surface. It resides along the coast of North America. |
27322745_0_1 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata. Distribution and habitat
The distribution of Mopalia ciliata is somewhat controversial, however it is agreed that it resides on the southern coast of North America as far south as Baja California. The presence of this species north of California is currently debated whether it be a similar species Mopalia Kennerleyi. Mopalia ciliata are found on the underside of rocks near cracks or crevices or other hard stubstrata in intertidal zones. |
27322745_0_2 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata. Color
Mopalia ciliata's valve colors mainly vary between pale green, white or dark brown. They can have colorful markings sometimes of olive, white, orange, red and blue. The girdle color can be dark green, pinkish or white. |
27322745_0_3 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata. Diet
This species is an omnivore. They feed on algae, bryozoans, hydroids and other low-growing organisms. |
27322745_0_4 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata. Biology
A chiton has a dorsal side composed of 8 valves embedded in the mantle tissue. Surrounding the valves is their thick mantle called the girdle. The valves are strong enough for protection, but shaped so that their bodies are flexible for moving on uneven rocks and turning into crevices. Mopalia species' girdles are covered with large setae that distinguish them from other genera. |
27322745_0_5 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata.
On their ventral surface they have a partial head, mouth, mantle, mantle cavity, foot, gills, gonopore, nephridiopore and anus. The ventral surface is bordered with the mantle and moving towards the center of the chiton is the mantle cavity. There they have a head on the anterior end and the foot below it extending to the posterior end of the chiton. The mantle cavity is divided into two chambers by ctenidia that circulate water and waste through the chiton. The gill cilia draw in water through the incurrent chamber and run posteriorly in the excurrent stream where they are discharged. |
27322745_0_6 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata.
The foot runs the length of the entire ventral surface yet does not extend past the girdle. Its way of motion is by moving its foot in small waves of muscular activity. It is termed as pedal waves. It also uses its foot for holding on to the substrate. They do this by lifting up the central portion of the foot, while retaining a tight seal on the outer portion of the foot. This creates a tight suction against the substrate and allows them to live in heavy wave zones. |
27322745_0_7 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata.
Their head is seen only as a partial head because they have no brain or eyes, but they are still responsive to possible predators and waves by creating suction or curling up in a ball. |
27322745_0_8 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata.
The radula, made of 17 teeth, has one pair of cusps in each row hardened with magnetite, which makes chiton the only mollusc with these specialized magnetite teeth. They also have a subradular organ that is used for taste. |
27322745_0_9 | 27322745 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mopalia%20ciliata | Mopalia ciliata | Mopalia ciliata. Characteristics
Valves
The valves are not always similar. They can vary from broad, to narrow plates as well as smooth or coarse plates. The plates are all notched posteriorly and have radial rows of pustules.
Girdle
The girdle is 1/2 to 3/4 the width of the valves. The girdle is studded with spines of spiculed setae.
Setae
The setae are very distinct if viewed under a scanning electron microscope. They have flat and broad setae, which bare 4 rows of large, curved white calcareous spicules. These are up to 600 micrometers in length.
Radula
The radula are not very distinguishable. In size they are proportionally 20% smaller than M. kennerleyi, a similar species.
Canal
Mopalia ciliata shares aesthete canal characteristics with M. spectabilis and M. swanii. They have a wider range of the slit ray canals that turn downwards towards the slit rays opposed to the short distance other Mopalia species have their slit ray canals extended. Another similarity between these three species is their horizontal canals that flank the jugal area fan out laterally opposed to straight. |
27322763_0_0 | 27322763 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Running%20on%20the%20Sun%3A%20The%20Badwater%20135 | Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135 | Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135.
Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135 is a 2000 documentary film directed by Mel Stuart. The film follows athletes as they run 135 miles in the 1999 Badwater Ultramarathon, starting in California's Death Valley and ending at Whitney Portal, the trailhead to Mount Whitney. |
27322763_0_1 | 27322763 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Running%20on%20the%20Sun%3A%20The%20Badwater%20135 | Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135 | Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135.
The winner for the 1999 race was Eric Clifton with a time of 27 hours and 49 minutes, beating the previous year winner, Gabriel Flores. |
27322771_0_0 | 27322771 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Coffey | Bill Coffey | Bill Coffey.
Bill Coffey is a businessman and minor league sports entrepreneur. He is one of the founders of the ECHL (formerly known as the East Coast Hockey League). Founded in 1988, the ECHL is a minor professional ice hockey league that serves as a development league for the NHL. The ECHL iced 20 teams during the 2009–10 season. |
27322771_0_1 | 27322771 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Coffey | Bill Coffey | Bill Coffey.
Coffey is also the founder of the Atlantic Coast Hockey League (ACHL) - where he served as the league's president; and he is the director of hockey operations for the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL). Coffey has been the owner of several minor league ice hockey teams. |
27322771_0_2 | 27322771 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Coffey | Bill Coffey | Bill Coffey. Teams owned by Bill Coffey
Fayetteville Force (CHL)
Knoxville Cherokees (ECHL)
St. Petersburg Parrots (ACHL)
Tallahassee Tide (ACHL)
Greensboro Monarchs (ECHL)
Winston-Salem Thunderbirds (ECHL) |
27322774_0_0 | 27322774 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco%20Antonio%20Perib%C3%A1n | Marco Antonio Peribán | Marco Antonio Peribán.
Marco Antonio Peribán Hernández (born 10 August 1984) is a Mexican professional boxer. He is signed with Oscar De La Hoya's Company Golden Boy Promotions. |
27322774_0_1 | 27322774 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco%20Antonio%20Perib%C3%A1n | Marco Antonio Peribán | Marco Antonio Peribán. Personal life
He is the brother of the professional female boxer Guadalupe Peribán, also signed with Golden Boy Promotions. |
27322774_0_2 | 27322774 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco%20Antonio%20Perib%C3%A1n | Marco Antonio Peribán | Marco Antonio Peribán. Amateur career
Peribán with an outstanding amateur career which included wins over American Shawn Porter. He had numerous national championships in Mexico, member of the Mexico national team, and in the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games won a bronze medal. |
27322774_0_3 | 27322774 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco%20Antonio%20Perib%C3%A1n | Marco Antonio Peribán | Marco Antonio Peribán. Professional career
Peribán won his pro debut against Oscar Solis by third round knock-out. Periban is a very skilled fighter with one of the hardest punches of Mexican Boxing history and one of the few bright spots for Mexican boxing above 160 pounds. Marco achieved international fame after his US and Golden Boy Promotions debut fight over the then 10-0 Roger & Floyd Mayweather´s prospect Dion Savage, Jr. in San Diego, California. The fight lasted just 33 seconds as Peribán knocked Savage out with a fast left-right combination in the first round. |
27322781_0_0 | 27322781 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sompura%20Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin.
The Sompura Brahmin are a Hindu caste found in the state of Gujarat and Rajasthan in India. They are a sub-group of the Brahmin community. |
27322781_0_1 | 27322781 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sompura%20Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin. History and origin
According to their traditions, the Sompura Brahmin are so named because they were created by the god Chandra to perform sacred ceremonies called Som Yajna for the god Shiva. They are concentrated in the town of Prabas Patan and form one of the oldest Brahmin communities in Gujarat; they speak Gujarati.
Skand puran gives reference for the creation of Sompura Brahmins wide its chapter 21/22/23/24
The agnihotri brahmins from chandra lok came to prabhas with hemgarbha -the chief secretary of moon god to conduct-perform a pratishtha yagya of the first temple of lord somnath and after the yagya the moon god requested these Brahmins to stay there. These Brahmins stayed near somnath so they are called Sompura brahmins.
Generally the civilisations develops and moves with the source of water worldwide, but the sompura brahmin is the only class who are stable near somnath for at least 2000 years. |
27322781_0_2 | 27322781 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sompura%20Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin | Sompura Brahmin. Present circumstances
Like other Brahmin communities, they consist of gotras which are exogamous. The Sompuras have 18 gotras. Eleven of them are spread all over Gujarat and Rajasthan and practice temple architecture with shilp-shastra. Most of the other seven gotras stay near Prabhas/Somnath; their main profession was and still is yajman vrutti (priestly services) in the temples, particularly in and around Somnath. Sompura Brahman are priest in Somnath Temple. The community is moving very highly in society in both business and education. They are strict vegetarians. |
27322782_0_0 | 27322782 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St.%20Louis%20Observer | St. Louis Observer | St. Louis Observer.
The St. Louis Observer was an abolitionist newspaper established by Elijah Lovejoy, a New England Congregationalist minister, in St. Louis, Missouri. After the newspaper's printing press was destroyed for a third time by a pro-slavery mob, the newspaper was re-located to Alton, Illinois, and renamed the Alton Observer. |
27322782_0_1 | 27322782 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St.%20Louis%20Observer | St. Louis Observer | St. Louis Observer. See also
Abolitionism in the United States
Elijah Lovejoy
Alton Observer |
27322782_0_2 | 27322782 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St.%20Louis%20Observer | St. Louis Observer | St. Louis Observer. References
Vaughn, Stephen L. (editor) Encyclopedia of American Journalism (Routledge, 2009) p. 4 |
27322782_0_3 | 27322782 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St.%20Louis%20Observer | St. Louis Observer | St. Louis Observer.
Defunct newspapers published in Missouri
Abolitionist newspapers published in the United States
Publications established in 1834
Publications disestablished in 1836
1836 disestablishments |
27322797_0_0 | 27322797 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haw%20Creek | Haw Creek | Haw Creek. Haw Creek may refer to:
Haw Creek (Morgan County, Missouri), a stream in Missouri
Haw Creek (Salt River), a stream in Missouri
Haw Creek (Haw River tributary), a stream in Alamance County, North Carolina
Haw Creek Township (disambiguation) |
27322814_0_0 | 27322814 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sachora%20Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin.
The Sachora Brahmin are a Hindu caste found in the state of Gujarat in India. They are a sub-group of the Brahmin community. |
27322814_1_0 | 27322814 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sachora%20Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin. History and origin
The community get their name from the town of Sanchore in Jalore district of Rajasthan. The Ista Devi of this community is Sati Dakshayani Mata whose temple is based at the Sanchor. The Ista Devta of this community is "Surya Narayan Bhagavan" and their three various "Swaroop" are worshiped. The first one is "Balark Prabhu" whose temple is based at "Barmer" in Rajasthan. The second one is "PingalShyamji" whose temple is based at "Planswa" in Gujarat. The third one quite not updated. This community is first time migrated in the 12th century for development of their caste & start to leaving in North Gujarat. Second time they are said to have left Rajasthan in the 15th century fleeing a Muslim invasion. Their initial settlement was Shedrasana, near Palanpur. Then they divided in groups with Balarkji, Pingalshyamji and vrudharkaji. Palasava in Kutch District, "Gujarat" from where they dispersed to neighbouring Saurashtra. In Kutch, they were temple priests at the temple of Achleshwar Mahadeo. They are now found in the districts of Rajkot, Junagadh, Kutch, Ahmedabad, Amreli and Mehsana. The community speak the Kathiawari dialect of Gujarati. Most Sanchihar People live in Gujarat, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh mainly.
They mainly belong to Vallabh beliefs. They worship mainly Lord Krishna swaroop. |
27322814_2_0 | 27322814 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sachora%20Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin. Present circumstances
The Sachora Brahmin are pure vegetarians, with wheat, maize and millet being their main food source. They have four subdivisions, the Rigvedio Ashwalyami, Shuklayajurvedni Madhyandhini and Siddharkdeoni Shankhayan. They have further eighteen exogamous gotras, the Kaudiniya, Kashyap, Kaushik, Bharadwaj, Parashar, Mudgal, Alembayan, Shatatap, Krishnatreyi Herit, Jyesta Shandiya, Kamishth Shandilya, Gautam, Katayan, Vatsa, Garg, Jyesta Bhargav and Laukash. All these gotras are equal in status and named after Hindu saints. Common surnames of the community include Raval, Shastri, Dave, Joshi, Raman, Bhatt, Vyas, Thakar, Pujarai, Mehta, shukla and Trivedi. |
27322814_2_1 | 27322814 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sachora%20Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin | Sachora Brahmin. Present circumstances
The community is split between those who are small scale farmers and those who maintain their traditional occupation of temple priest. |
27322852_0_0 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon.
Jillian Harmon (born 3 March 1987) is an American-New Zealand professional basketball player. |
27322852_1_0 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. College
After four years of high school basketball for Lakeridge High School in Lake Oswego, Oregon, Harmon then played college basketball for the Stanford Cardinal in Stanford, California, participating in NCAA Division I. During her time at Stanford, Harmon reached the Final Four twice. |
27322852_2_0 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. Europe
After her college career, Harmon first signed with Pool Comense for the 2009–10 season of Italy's Serie A1. In 2012, Harmon would make the move to Lavezzini Parma. After a season abroad in Australia and New Zealand, Harmon returned to Italy after signing with Le Mura Lucca. In 2017, Harmon won her first championship with Lucca. |
27322852_2_1 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. Australia
Harmon was signed for the 2014–15 WNBL season with the Townsville Fire. Playing alongside the likes of Suzy Batkovic, Micaela Cocks and Cayla George, Harmon helped lead the Fire to their first WNBL championship. |
27322852_2_2 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. National team
In 2008, Harmon tried out for the New Zealand national team after learning she was eligible because her mother was born in New Zealand. Harmon and former Stanford teammate Clare Bodensteiner were both named to the team shortly before the Olympics. Harmon made her international debut for the Tall Ferns at the 2008 Olympics. |
27322852_2_3 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. Source
In 2011, Harmon took home the silver medal at the 2011 FIBA Oceania Championship. After taking home the silver, Harmon and the Tall Ferns would then go on to participate in the Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Turkey. After losses to Argentina and the Czech Republic, they failed to qualify. |
27322852_2_4 | 27322852 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jillian%20Harmon | Jillian Harmon | Jillian Harmon. Source
In 2016, Harmon would once again join the Tall Ferns and compete in the Olympic Qualifying Tournament, with this edition in France. However, they failed to qualify again. |
27322871_0_0 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup.
The 2009-10 version of the Syrian Cup is the 40th edition to be played. It is the premier knockout tournament for football teams in Syria. |
27322871_1_0 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup. First round
32 teams play a knockout tie. 16 clubs advance to the next round. Games played over two legs |
27322871_2_0 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup.
¹ Azaz failed to the 2nd leg, match awarded 3-0 to Al-Nawair. |
27322871_2_1 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup. The games were played on May 10–19, 2010.
² Ommal Al-Quneitra failed to the First round, matches awarded 3–0 to Afrin. |
27322871_2_2 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup. Round of 16
16 teams play a knockout tie. 8 clubs advance to the next round. Games played over two legs |
27322871_3_0 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup.
¹ Hutteen failed to the 2nd leg, match awarded 3–0 to Al-Jazeera. |
27322871_3_1 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup. Quarter-finals
8 teams play a knockout tie. 4 clubs advance to the next round. Games played over two legs |
27322871_4_0 | 27322871 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Syrian%20Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup | 2009–10 Syrian Cup. Semi-finals
4 teams played a knockout tie. 2 clubs advanced to the Final. Games played over two legs. |
27322873_0_0 | 27322873 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What%20About%20Me%3F%20%28Nicole%20album%29 | What About Me? (Nicole album) | What About Me? (Nicole album).
What About Me? is the debut album by Nicole (real name Lillie McCloud). The album simply refers to her as Nicole. Timmy Thomas appears on the album with Nicole on the song "New York Eyes". |
27322873_1_0 | 27322873 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What%20About%20Me%3F%20%28Nicole%20album%29 | What About Me? (Nicole album) | What About Me? (Nicole album). Side one
"Don't You Want My Love"
"New York Eyes" (with Timmy Thomas)
"Housecalls"
"What About Me" |
27322873_1_1 | 27322873 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What%20About%20Me%3F%20%28Nicole%20album%29 | What About Me? (Nicole album) | What About Me? (Nicole album). Side two
"Always and Forever"
"Why You Take My Love"
"Ordinary Girl"
"Shy Boy"
"It Happens Every Night" |
27322877_0_0 | 27322877 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton%20Observer | Alton Observer | Alton Observer.
The Alton Observer (1837) was an abolitionist newspaper established in Alton, Illinois, by the journalist and newspaper editor Elijah Lovejoy after he was forced to flee St. Louis, Missouri. Lovejoy left St. Louis, where he edited the St. Louis Observer, after his printing press was destroyed for the third time. |
27322877_0_1 | 27322877 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton%20Observer | Alton Observer | Alton Observer.
Although Illinois was a free state and Alton was linked to the Underground Railroad, the city also had a large pro-slavery faction, including slave catchers and others dependent on slaves. The former earned money by their capture of slaves' escaping across the Mississippi from Missouri. Southern Illinois had numerous slavery supporters, where farmers used slave labor for cultivation. |
27322877_0_2 | 27322877 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton%20Observer | Alton Observer | Alton Observer.
On November 7, 1837, abolition opponents mobbed the warehouse where Lovejoy had his press, and gunfire was exchanged between them and his supporters. Lovejoy and his supporters killed one man in the mob, named Bishop, and wounded others. While they were trying to prevent the burning of the warehouse, Lovejoy and Royal Weller were shot; Lovejoy died immediately. The mob threw the press out the window and into the river. Publication of the Alton Observer ended after Lovejoy's murder, but his brother Owen Lovejoy became a leader of the abolitionists in Illinois and carried on the struggle. Elijah Lovejoy was considered a martyr by abolitionists across the country. |
27322877_0_3 | 27322877 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton%20Observer | Alton Observer | Alton Observer. See also
Abolitionism in the United States
Elijah P. Lovejoy Monument
St. Louis Observer |
27322891_0_0 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow.
Vincent Charles Marrow (born August 17, 1968) is an American football coach and former NFL tight end. He is currently the Associate Head Coach at the University of Kentucky. |
27322891_0_1 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow. Early years
Marrow played basketball and football at Cardinal Mooney High School in Youngstown, Ohio. |
27322891_0_2 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow. College career
Marrow played basketball at Youngstown State University for two years (1988–89). He transferred to the University of Toledo where he played in 11 games as a tight end in his final collegiate season. He was named to the All-Mid-American Conference second team in 1991. |
27322891_0_3 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow. Professional career
Marrow was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the 11th round of the 1992 NFL Draft (307th pick overall). |
27322891_0_4 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow. Coaching career
Marrow was named tight ends coach for the Omaha Nighthawks of the United Football League on May 10, 2010. |
27322891_0_5 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow.
Marrow spent two years (2011–12) as a graduate assistant at the University of Nebraska. Under long-term acquaintance Bo Pelini, Marrow served as a tutor to the tight ends. In 2012, Nebraska was granted a waiver from the NCAA to allow Marrow to recruit off campus while associate head coach Barney Cotton was unable to travel while recovering from surgery. |
27322891_0_6 | 27322891 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vince%20Marrow | Vince Marrow | Vince Marrow.
In December 2012, Marrow earned a full-time position as an assistant coach for the University of Kentucky under head coach Mark Stoops and received a promotion a year later to recruiting coordinator. |
27322902_0_0 | 27322902 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VV%20Baronie | VV Baronie | VV Baronie.
VV Baronie is a Dutch amateur association football club based in Breda. |
27322902_0_1 | 27322902 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VV%20Baronie | VV Baronie | VV Baronie. History
The club was founded on July 4, 1926, and has always been the second club of the city, being overshadowed by the far more successful NAC Breda. In 1955 the club entered into professional football in the Tweede Divisie, but failed to make a breakthrough in the local football fanbase, experiencing very low turnouts during those years. Such issues, coupled with a budget far lower than all other professional clubs, led the Dutch Football Federation to exclude Baronie from the league in 1971. Since then, Baronie has played at amateur level, winning six times the Hoofdklasse title. Baronie was part of the newly established Topklasse level in 2010–11 and has descended from that league after one season. |
27322902_1_0 | 27322902 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VV%20Baronie | VV Baronie | VV Baronie. Football clubs in the Netherlands
Association football clubs established in 1926
1926 establishments in the Netherlands
Football clubs in North Brabant
Football clubs in Breda |
27322936_0_0 | 27322936 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia%20Christen | Claudia Christen | Claudia Christen.
Claudia Christen (born 1973 in Bern, Switzerland) is a multi-disciplinary designer with roots in photography, best known for her design of the New York City taxi logo. She is the senior communication designer and photographer at Smart Design. |
27322936_0_1 | 27322936 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia%20Christen | Claudia Christen | Claudia Christen.
In 1995 she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in graphic design at the School of Visual Art in Biel, Switzerland. In 2004 she completed the International Center of Photography's program in documentary photography and photojournalism and began freelance work on major design and advertising campaigns for clients including Reebok, Hewlett-Packard and the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission and Kavkas), Andrew Lichtenstein (Never Coming Home), and Christopher Morris (My America, 2007 International Center of Photography Infinity Award winner and 2007 Photo District News, Photo Books Award winner). |
27322936_0_2 | 27322936 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia%20Christen | Claudia Christen | Claudia Christen.
She has received several awards. While at Smart Design she worked on award-winning designs for OXO International (IDEA Bronze Award winner, 2001) and Kaleidescape (IDEA Silver Award winner, 2004). She was awarded HOW magazine Merit Awards in 1999 and 2002; and the 2007 PDN Award for Personal Projects for her ongoing, large-format project, "Relics", documenting the American landscape. She has been published in Time magazine, How Design Books, Innovation magazine and Graphics magazine. |
Subsets and Splits