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Say What You Mean is the third studio album of the Washington-based music group Maktub.
Track listing
"Promise Me" – 4:28
"Say What You Mean" – 4:11
"20 Years" – 5:21
"Daily Dosage" – 3:38
"Hunt You Down" – 4:16
"Seeing Is Believing" – 3:39
"Blown Away" – 5:09
"Feel Like Another One" – 4:31
... |
You Call This Music?! Volume 2 (2002) is the second volume in a series of punk music compilations released by Southern California-based Geykido Comet Records. Its cover artwork is by NYC artist Fly.
The series title lampoons the Top-40 offerings of the "Now! That's What I Call Music" series.
Reception
OC Weekly wrote... |
Sorbia affinis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1964. It is known from Borneo.
References
Mesosini
Beetles described in 1964 |
Blantyre ( or ; ) is a town and civil parish in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, with a population of 16,900. It is bounded by the River Clyde to the north, the Rotten Calder to the west, the Park Burn to the east (denoting the boundary with the larger adjoining town of Hamilton) and the Rotten Burn to the south.
Blantyre... |
The following is a list of characters from the Dark Shadows franchise. The list distinguishes characters from the original ABC daytime soap opera series, the 1970s films, the 1991 NBC remake series, the 2004 WB pilot, and the 2012 film.
1966–1971: Dark Shadows
1970: House of Dark Shadows
1971: Night of Dark Shadows
... |
Het Parool () is an Amsterdam-based daily newspaper. It was first published on 10 February 1941 as a resistance paper during the German occupation of the Netherlands (1940–1945). In English, its name means The Password or The Motto.
History
Second World War
The paper was preceded by a stenciled newsletter which was ... |
James King Gibson (February 18, 1812 – March 30, 1879) was a nineteenth-century American politician, merchant, sheriff and banker from Virginia. He served one term in the United States House of Representatives.
Early life
James King Gibson was born in Abingdon, Virginia on February 18, 1812. He attended the common sch... |
Nita Madhav is an epidemiologist and risk modeler who was CEO of Metabiota from 2019 - 2022.
Education
Madhav graduated from Yale University in 2002 with degrees in ecology and evolutionary biology, and received her Master's in Public health from Emory University in 2005.
Career
After time at the Centers for Diseas... |
Clyde Boats was a small, privately owned, custom boat company located in Detroit, Michigan. For nearly fifty years it produced custom mahogany motorboats for clients in the Great Lakes area.
The early years
Clyde Boats was founded in 1928 in the living room of founder Clyde Rummney's Michigan home near the shores of L... |
734 Benda (prov. designation: or ) is a large background asteroid from the outer regions of the asteroid belt, approximately in diameter. It was discovered by Austrian astronomer Johann Palisa at the Vienna Observatory on 11 October 1912. For its size, the dark X-type asteroid has a relatively short rotation period o... |
The 2019–20 División de Honor was the 53rd season of the top flight of the Spanish domestic rugby union competition since its inception in 1953.
Valladolid won its fourth consecutive title, its tenth overall, in a curtailed season.
Competition format
The División de Honor season takes place between September and Mar... |
Heinrich Wagner (9 August 1888, Hamburg – 24 June 1959, Hamburg) was a German chess master.
In 1920/21, he won in Kiel. In 1921, he took 8th in Hamburg (the 21st DSB Congress, Erhardt Post won), and won in Hamburg (Quadrangular). In 1922 he tied for 3rd-5th in Oeynhausen (the 22nd DSB–Congress, Post won). In 1923 ... |
El Viso del Alcor is a city located in the province of Seville, Spain. , the city has a population of 19,191 inhabitants.
Culture
Brotherhood of Dolores
References
External links
Official website
Municipalities of the Province of Seville |
The European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships were first held in 1957.
Three medals are awarded: gold for first place, silver for second place, and bronze for third place. Tie breakers have not been used in every year. In the event of a tie between two gymnasts, both names are listed, and the following positi... |
Murchison County was one of the counties of New Zealand on the South Island.
During the period 1853 to 1876, the area that would become Murchison County was administered as part of Nelson Province. On 1 April 1909, the Murchison County Act 1908 came into force, creating the Murchison County out of what had been the Ha... |
David Pallister (born as David Pallister Clark; 15 March 1945 – 4 September 2021) was a British investigative journalist. He worked on The Guardian for many years, specialising in miscarriages of justice, the arms trade, corruption in international business, and British and international politics, terrorism and terrori... |
The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited is India's largest private sector shipping company which mainly transports liquid, gas and solid bulk products. The company has two segments in their business: Shipping & Offshore. The shipping business is involved in transportation of crude oil, petroleum products, Liquified ... |
Muslim Khan is a captured Pakistani militant and former spokesman for the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan chapter based in Swat and became the chief spokesman of the Swat Taliban in 2007.
Early life and education
Born in Kabal Tehsil, Swat, in 1954 Khan started out as a student activist of a left-wing secular party in the ... |
The Segundo River (, 'Second River'), also known as Xanaes, is a river in the center-north of the province of Córdoba, Argentina. It is born in the Paravachasca Valley at the confluence of the Los Molinos and Anizacate rivers, on the eastern slopes of the Cumbres de Achala (Sierras Grandes), about above mean sea level... |
Blackney is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Gary Blackney (born 1944), American football player and coach
Ron Blackney (1933–2008), Australian middle distance runner
William W. Blackney (1876–1963), American politician
See also
Blackley (surname)
Blakney |
The 1998 Belmont Stakes was the 130th running of the Belmont Stakes and the 94th time that the event took place at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York.
Victory Gallop, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens and trained by W. Elliott Walden won the race by a nose over favorite Real Quiet. Victory Gallop's win prevented Real Quiet ... |
Carol Truax (3 October 1899June 1986) was an American music administrator and an author of many cookbooks. She was noted both for her time as Executive Director of Fine Arts at Colorado College (1945–1951), and also as consultant in Fine Arts to the State University of New York. As author, Miss Truax's most famous publ... |
Eel City is the name given to a community of deep-sea eels living amongst hydrothermal vents in the new volcano of Nafanua in American Samoa. It is unique because most hydrothermal vents are predominantly inhabited by invertebrates, whereas there is little invertebrate life in Eel City.
The community of eels was disco... |
The Appleton Building occupied the front of a small block which was bounded by Broadway, Leonard Street, and Catharine Alley in New York City. It stood on the site of what is now 346 Broadway, was four stories tall, and was constructed entirely of brown stone. It was a familiar landmark in a quickly changing Broadway o... |
Młynkowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Połajewo, within Czarnków-Trzcianka County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately west of Połajewo, south-east of Czarnków, and north-west of the regional capital Poznań.
References
Villages in Czarnków-Trzcianka Cou... |
WTSN was a Canadian English language category 1 television channel owned by CTV Specialty Television Inc. (CTV Specialty), a joint venture between Bell Globemedia (80%) and ESPN (20%). The channel broadcast sports programming featuring female athletes.
Marketed as "the world's first 24-hour sports network dedicated to... |
Otto Göbl (16 September 1936 – 17 July 2009) was a West German bobsledder who competed from the late 1950s to the early 1960s. He won four medals at the FIBT World Championships, taking home one gold (Four-man: 1962), two silvers (Two-man: 1960, four-man: 1958), and one bronze (Four-man: 1959). Göbl also finished fifth... |
The non-marine molluscs of Japan are a part of the molluscan fauna of Japan (wildlife of Japan).
A number of species of non-marine molluscs are found in the wild in Japan.
Extinct gastropods in Japan include: Vitrinula chaunax, Vitrinula chichijimana, Vitrinula hahajimana.
Freshwater gastropods
Pomatiopsidae
Oncom... |
USS Ontonagon (AOG-36) was a Mettawee-class gasoline tanker acquired by the U.S. Navy for the dangerous task of transporting gasoline to warships in the fleet, and to remote Navy stations.
Ontonagon, ex MC hull 1799, was laid down 10 May 1944 by the East Coast Ship Yard Inc., Bayonne, New Jersey; launched 30 June 194... |
Ferdinand Lucas Parker (11 July 1885 – 1959) was a South Australian public servant, clerk of the House of Assembly.
History
Parker was born in Ovingham, South Australia to Henry George Parker (c. 1849 – 6 July 1933) and Louise Eleanor Parker (c. 1856 – 27 February 1934) of Buxton Street, North Adelaide. He was educat... |
Lillian Shadic [Campbell] (June 14, 1929 – June 27, 2017) was an All-American Girls Professional Baseball League center fielder. Listed at 5' 5", 145 lb., she batted and threw right handed.
Lillian Shadic played one season barnstorming in the All-American League.
Born in Chatham, New York, Shadic was dubbed Pete as a... |
Vyacheslav Anatolevich "Slava" Kozlov (; born May 3, 1972) is a Russian former professional ice hockey left winger.
Kozlov was a member of the Stanley Cup winning Detroit Red Wings teams of 1997 and 1998, and was also a member of the famed Russian Five. He also later played for the Buffalo Sabres and Atlanta Thrashers... |
Kirsi Rautava (born 22 June 1978) is a Finnish snowboarder. She competed in the women's halfpipe event at the 2002 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
1978 births
Living people
Finnish female snowboarders
Olympic snowboarders for Finland
Snowboarders at the 2002 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Kajaani |
The Pfaueninsel Palace () is a Romantic-style building on the shore of the Havel in Berlin. Constructed on behalf of Frederick William II, the Lustschloss was completed in 1797. Today, the palace is a museum of the
Prussian Palaces and Gardens Foundation Berlin-Brandenburg.
Planning
Between 1787 and 1792, Friedrich W... |
The generalized valence bond (GVB) is a method in valence bond theory that uses flexible orbitals in the general way used by modern valence bond theory. The method was developed by the group of William A. Goddard, III around 1970.
Theory
The generalized Coulson–Fischer theory for the hydrogen molecule, discussed in Mo... |
Marian Ruth Engel (née Passmore; May 24, 1933 – February 16, 1985) was a Canadian novelist and a founding member of the Writers' Union of Canada. Her most famous and controversial novel was Bear (1976), a tale of erotic love between an archivist and a bear.
Biography
Born May 24, 1933, in Toronto, Ontario, Engel live... |
Josiah Sobowale Sowande (ca 1858 -1936) also known as Sobo Arobiodu was a Yoruba poet from Abeokuta, Ogun State who was a pioneer writer of Ewi, a Yoruba language style of poetry.
His works were influenced by his Egba upbringing, the activities of the Christian Missionary Society in Egbaland and popular Egba chants, ... |
Rahat Khan (19 December 1940 – 28 August 2020) was a Bangladeshi journalist and litterateur. He wrote more than 32 novels. He won Bangla Academy Literary Award in 1973 and Ekushey Padak in 1996 by the Government of Bangladesh.
Early life
Khan was born on 19 December 1940 in Kishoreganj. He wrote his first story as a s... |
The Larimore House was a historic residence and school in Florence, Alabama that was home to Theophilus Brown Larimore (died March 18, 1929), an influential Christian evangelist in the United States. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
History
The house was built as a residence f... |
Milton Wolsky (1916–1981) was an American painter and illustrator. Educated in his hometown of Omaha, Nebraska and in Chicago, Illinois, and he worked as a magazine illustrator in New York City in the 1940s–1950s. His work can be seen at the Museum of Nebraska Art and the Joslyn Art Museum.
References
1916 births
198... |
Oradis is a genus of hymenopteran insects of the family Eulophidae.
References
Key to Nearctic eulophid genera
Universal Chalcidoidea Database
Eulophidae |
Mark A. Johnson is an American men's basketball coach, currently coaching at Fort Hays State University. Prior to his position, Johnson served as the assistant coach for the program from 1996 to 2001, as well as interim head coach leading up to the 1997–98 season. Prior to becoming an assistant coach at Fort Hays State... |
Hristiyan Kozhuharov (; born 12 February 1991) is a Bulgarian footballer, currently playing for Yantra Polski Trambesh as a midfielder.
References
External links
Living people
1991 births
Bulgarian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
PFC Vidima-Rakovski Sevlievo players
FC Kaliakra Kavarna playe... |
Darreh Kashkin (, also Romanized as Darreh Kashkīn) is a village in Bazman Rural District, Bazman District, Iranshahr County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 76, in 16 families.
References
Populated places in Iranshahr County |
Carolina is a village that straddles the border of the towns of Charlestown and Richmond on the Pawcatuck River in Washington County, Rhode Island. Rhode Island Route 112 passes through the village. Carolina is identified as a census-designated place, with a population of 970 at the 2010 census.
Overview
The Carolina... |
Alain Sergile (born February 15, 1972 ) is a Haitian swimmer who competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He graduated from Southern Methodist University in 1994 where he was a member of the men's swimming and diving team. Sergile participated in the men's 100 meter butterfly, finishing with a time of ... |
Louisa Akavi is a New Zealand Red Cross nurse and recipient of the rarely awarded Florence Nightingale Medal. Akavi was kidnapped in Syria in October 2013 and subsequently taken hostage by Islamic State forces in May 2014. Akavi's captivity remained a tightly held secret by the New Zealand Government and media for the ... |
The 2017–18 Ranji Trophy was the 84th season of the Ranji Trophy, the first-class cricket tournament in India. It was contested by 28 teams divided into four groups, each containing seven teams. The top two teams from Group A progressed to the quarterfinals of the competition. Both of Hyderabad's first two matches were... |
Turbo exquisitus, common name the exquisite turban, is a species of sea snail, marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae.
Description
The length of the shell varies between 12 mm and 24 mm. The shell is small, imperforate, and solid. Its color pattern is pale greenish buff or light pink, painted with very broa... |
Nong Muang (, ) is a district (amphoe) in the northern part of Lopburi province, central Thailand.
History
Following a suggestion issued in 1989, six tambons were separated from Khok Samrong district to form the new minor district (king amphoe) Nong Muang on 1 April 1990. The minor district was upgraded to full distri... |
Jim Lewis (born December 15, 1946) is a former collegiate and WNBA basketball coach. After completing assistant coaching positions during the 1970s, Lewis was the head coach of the South Lakes High School boys' basketball team in the early 1980s. In collegiate basketball, Lewis obtained 201 wins and 107 losses as the G... |
Jacqueline Kudler (born 1935) is a poet and educator who lives in Sausalito, California.
Writing
In 1999, Kudler helped to found Sixteen Rivers Press, a poetry-publishing collective of which she remains a member. Her first collection of poetry, The Sacred Precinct (), was published in 2004. Easing Into Dark (), her s... |
The 2021 Denmark Open (officially known as the Victor Denmark Open 2021 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at the Odense Sports Park in Odense, Denmark, from 19 to 24 October 2021 and had a total prize of US$850,000.
The tournament which originally was a Super 750 event later got upg... |
The Outliner of Giants was commercial Outlining Software. Like other outliners, it allows the user to create a document consisting of a series of nested lists. It is one of a number of browser-based outliners that are delivered as a web application, used through a web browser, rather than being installed as a stand-alo... |
Kathryn Linn Cottingham is a Professor of Ecology, Evolution, Environment and Society in the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding at Dartmouth College. She is a Fellow of the Ecological Society of America and American Association for the Advancement of Science. From 2020 she will serve as editor-in-... |
Qala-e-Naw () is a town in Qala e Naw District and the capital of Badghis Province, in north-west Afghanistan. Its population was estimated at 9,000 in 2006, of which mostly Sunni Hazaras. Other significant communities include Tajiks, Pashtuns, Balochs and Uzbeks.
The city of Qala-e-naw has a population of 64,125 peop... |
The News is a Mexican English-language newspaper that was published in Mexico City five days per week, Monday through Friday. With the exception of the five years between 2002 and 2007, the newspaper has published continuously since its founding on July 5, 1950. It is owned by Mexican media company Grupo Mac.
Histor... |
Marthe Robert (March 25, 1914 – April 12, 1996) was a French essayist and translator.
Robert was born in Paris on March 25, 1914. In 1941, she met psychoanalyst Michel de M'Uzan, whom she later married. In 1995, she received the Grand Prix National des Lettres.
Her work is influenced by Sigmund Freud and psychoanalys... |
Odd E. Hopp (born 15 August 1913 – 21 July 2001) was a Norwegian Scout leader, orienteer and sports official.
Early and personal life
Hopp was the son of Georg B. Hopp and Klara Gustave Ruud, and was married to Eva Marit Eimstad. He graduated from Oslo Handelsgymnasium in 1931, and was appointed at Norges Varemesse fr... |
Doctors Hospital of Laredo is a for-profit hospital owned and operated by Universal Health Services. There are 164 physicians on the medical staff with the hospital, 80 of whom are active staff. Has a Level III Trauma Center and a Level III NICU, as well as a wide array of medical services. Doctors Hospital of Laredo i... |
LOL: Last One Laughing Naija is a Nigerian comedy show and franchise of the international comedy format LOL. It was hosted by actor and comedian Basketmouth and was broadcast on Prime Video. The first season began airing on 14 July 2023.
Participants
Okey Bakassi
Acapella
Mr Funny aka Sabinus
KieKie
Buchi
D... |
Manu Sareen (born 16 May 1968 in India) is the former Minister for Equality and former Church and Nordic Cooperation, in the Cabinet of Helle Thorning-Schmidt and former and member of the Copenhagen City Council, elected for the Danish Social Liberal Party.
Life
Sareen was raised on Amager, where the family moved to... |
Benjamin Jekhowsky (, born 1881 in Saint-Petersburg (Russia), died in 1975, Encausse-les-Thermes (France)) was a Russian–French astronomer, born in Saint-Petersburg in a noble family of a Russian railroad official.
After attending Moscow University, he worked at the Paris Observatory beginning in 1912. Later he worke... |
Ahmedabad is the largest city in the state of Gujarat. It is located in western India on the banks of the River Sabarmati. The city served as political as well as economical capital of the region since its establishment. The earliest settlement can be recorded around the 12th century under Chaulukya dynasty rule. The p... |
Ptilopsaltis santarosae is a moth of the family Acrolophidae. It is found in Costa Rica.
References
Moths described in 1986
Acrolophidae |
The 505th Bombardment Group is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last assignment was with Thirteenth Air Force, stationed at Clark Field, Philippines. It was inactivated on 30 June 1946.
The unit served primarily in the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II as part of Twentieth Air Force. The 505th Bomb ... |
David Henry Fromkin (August 27, 1932 June 11, 2017) was an American historian, best known for his interpretive account of the Middle East, A Peace to End All Peace (1989), in which he recounts the role European powers played between 1914 and 1922 in creating the modern Middle East. The book was a finalist for both the... |
An airship or dirigible balloon is a type of aerostat or lighter-than-air aircraft that can navigate through the air under its own power.
Airship or The Airship may also refer to:
A law-enforcement helicopter in American English
Airship (ballad), an 1840 ballad
Airship (band), a British indie rock band
Airship (co... |
Thomas Falconer (1772–1839) was an English clergyman and classical scholar.
Life
The son of William Falconer, M.D., F.R.S., of Bath, Somerset by Henrietta, daughter of Thomas Edmunds of Worsborough Hall, Yorkshire, he was born on 24 December 1772, and educated at the cathedral school, Chester, the grammar school in Ba... |
Jeremy Snyder is an American poet. He serves as poet laureate of Vallejo, California.
Background
Snyder was born in Vallejo, California, educated at the University of Montana, and served in the United States Navy.
Poetry
Jeremy Snyder began writing poetry at age 5. From 2018 to 2022, Snyder hosted a poetry open mic,... |
''Premium Pension Limited (PPL)''' is a leading Pension Fund Administrator (PFA) in Nigeria
which provides a range of products and services to clients based in over 10 states of Nigeria. Premium Pension Limited is licensed by the National Pension Commission in December 2005, under the new Pension Reform Act, 2004. The ... |
Çambulak () is a village in the Ovacık District, Tunceli Province, Turkey. The village is populated by Kurds of the Kalan tribe and had a population of 50 in 2021.
The hamlets of Akarçay, Balveren, Dirok, Eroğlu, Karaçalı, Köyceğiz, Toptaş and Yapılı are attached to the village.
References
Kurdish settlements in Tu... |
Gorilla scandal () is a political corruption scandal in Slovakia. It is named after a Slovak Secret Service wiretap file () from the years 2005-2006 which leaked to the internet in December 2011. The file suggests information about politicians, officials and business executives discussing kickbacks in return for procu... |
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provid... |
Ferdinando Martini (30 July 1840 – 24 April 1928) was an Italian writer and politician. He was governor of Eritrea for from late 1897 to early 1907.
Biography
Born in Florence, he worked as journalist and writer. He collaborated with Il Fanfulla and in 1879 he founded the Fanfulla della domenica literary supplement, ... |
William Craven, D.D. (3 July 1730 – 28 January 1815) was a priest and academic in the second half of the 18th and the first decades of the 19th centuries.
Craven was born at Gouthwaite Hall and educated at Sedbergh School. He graduated B.A. from St John's College, Cambridge in 1753, and M.A. in 1756. He was ordained i... |
HMS Eclipse was an protected cruiser built for the Royal Navy in the mid-1890s.
Design
Eclipse-class second-class protected cruisers were preceded by the shorter Astraea-class cruisers. Eclipse had a displacement of when at normal load. It had a total length of , a beam of , a metacentric height of around , and a dr... |
Nadia Santos is a fictional character in the television series Alias, and a main character during the series' fourth season. She is played by Mía Maestro.
Biography
Introduced near the end of the third season, Nadia is the daughter resulting from an affair between Irina Derevko and Arvin Sloane. She is the half-sister... |
RNLB The Oddfellows (B-818) is the current rigid-inflatable inshore lifeboat on station at the English coastal town of Sheringham in the county of Norfolk in the United Kingdom.
State-of-the-art inshore lifeboat
The Oddfellows arrived on station 11 July 2007 to replace . This latest version of the Atlantic 85 class h... |
Nunoike Church, officially the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul, is the main cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Nagoya in central Japan.
History
The cathedral was completed in 1962. The architectural style is Gothic revival. The two belfries with their tall spires can be seen from a distance.
Masses are ... |
Gynacantha chaplini is a species of dragonfly described from North-eastern Bangladesh.
Range
Bangladesh
Etymology
The species is named in honor of the famous British actor and director, Sir Charles Spencer "Charlie" Chaplin (masculine noun, singular in the genitive case). The trapezium-shaped marking of the postfrons... |
Giacomo Ferrazzo (born 2 March 1999) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender.
Career
Como
In July 2019, Ferrazzo moved to Como, signing a three-year contract. He made his league debut for the club on 24 November 2019, coming on as an 84th minute substitute for Gabriele De Nuzzo in a 4–1 victory over Pianese.... |
Emperor Severus may refer to these Roman emperors:
Marcus Didius [Severus] Julianus Augustus (133/137–193), Roman emperor in the Year of the Five Emperors (193)
Lucius Septimius [Severus] Eusebes Pertinax Augustus (145–211), founding emperor (193–211) of the Severan dynasty
Marcus Aurelius [Severus] Antoninus August... |
```go
/*
path_to_url
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
// Code generated by lister-gen. DO NOT EDIT.
package v1
// EventListerExpansion allows custom methods to be added to
// EventLister.
type EventL... |
Flores is a corregimiento in Tonosí District, Los Santos Province, Panama with a population of 664 as of 2010. Its population as of 1990 was 634; its population as of 2000 was 528.
References
Corregimientos of Los Santos Province |
Mario Enrique Ríos Montt, C.M. (born March 17, 1932, in Huehuetenango, Guatemala) is an emeritus auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Guatemala, public figure and human rights activist. He is the brother of the late former general Efraín Ríos Montt, a dictator accused of genocide in Guatemala during th... |
Axiocerses heathi is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It is found in north-western Zambia.
References
Butterflies described in 1996
Axiocerses
Endemic fauna of Zambia
Butterflies of Africa |
Sonitpur Lok Sabha constituency is one of the 14 Lok Sabha constituencies in Assam state in north-eastern India.
See also
List of constituencies of the Lok Sabha
References
Lok Sabha constituencies in Assam
2023 establishments in Assam |
Pembe Marmara (25 December 1925 – 31 January 1984) was a Turkish Cypriot poet. She was one of the most important Turkish Cypriot poets of the 1940s and one of the earliest female Turkish Cypriot poets. Her poetry was influenced heavily by the Garip movement in Turkey and she wrote works of satire in free verse. Her poe... |
```html
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "path_to_url">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
<title>Struct template impl</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="../../../../../doc/src/boostbook.css" type="text/css">
<meta name="generator" conten... |
Patersonia juncea, commonly known as rush leaved patersonia, is a species of plant in the iris family Iridaceae and is endemic to a restricted part of the south-west of Western Australia. It is a tufted perennial herb with linear leaves and pale violet tepals.
Description
Patersonia juncea is a tufted perennial herb t... |
The Daraina sportive lemur (Lepilemur milanoii) is a sportive lemur endemic to Madagascar. It is a relatively small sportive lemur with a total length of about , of which are tail.
L. milanoii is found in northern Madagascar, living in dry deciduous, gallery, and semi-evergreen forests. Its known distribution range ... |
Sgùrr nan Gillean is a peak in the northern part of the Cuillin mountains on the Isle of Skye in Scotland. With a height of , it is one of eleven Munros in the Cuillins. It is the Munro peak nearest to the settlement of Sligachan, and its impressive triangular profile makes it one of the most recognizable of the Cuilli... |
Hicattee is a village in the Toledo District of Belize. In 2010, the village had a population of 363, mostly members of the Qʼeqchiʼ and Mopan peoples. The name of the village refers to a species of turtle called Hickatee (Dermatemys mawii).
Geography
The village is located on the Southern Highway, at the western tur... |
Kathleen Maisey Curtis, Lady Rigg (15 August 1892 – 5 September 1994) was a New Zealand mycologist and was a founder of plant pathology in New Zealand.
Biography
Early life and education
Curtis was born in Foxton on 15 August 1892 and was educated at Lyttelton West School from 1899 to 1902, Auckland Girls' Grammar Sc... |
Epps-Mcgill Farmhouse is a two-story Folk Victorian style home located near Kingstree, in Williamsburg County, South Carolina. Construction of the home began in 1905 by Silas Wightman Epps. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2020.
Description
The Epps-Mcgill Farmhouse was the residence for mu... |
Bishen may refer to:
Bishen, Iran, a village in Hamadan Province, Iran
Bishen Bedi (born 1946), former Indian cricketer
See also
Bishan (disambiguation)
Bi Sheng (972–1051 AD), Chinese artisan and inventor |
Ricardo Pedriel Suárez (born 19 January 1987) is a Bolivian footballer who plays as a forward for Wilstermann.
Club career
In 2009–10, Pedriel was demoted to the B squad of Steaua București.
In July 2009, he agreed a loan deal with Giresunspor, which participates in the Bank Asya First League.
In June 2010, he agree... |
The NWA Alabama Heavyweight Championship was created in October, 1962. Since its creation, the championship has been defended in a number of NWA territories throughout the decades.
Initially, the title was a part of Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling (GCCW) and later Southeastern Championship Wrestling (SECW), which be... |
The Easy Chain (2008) is the second novel by the American writer Evan Dara.
It tells the story of Lincoln Selwyn, the son of British parents who grows up in the Netherlands and, following a period of aimless wandering in his 20s, decides to attend the University of Chicago due to its rigorous curriculum. However, afte... |
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