text stringlengths 1 22.8M |
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USS Wando has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
, a steamer in commission as a gunboat from 1864 to 1865
, originally Tugboat No. 17, later YT-123, later YTB-123, a tug in commission 1917–1922 and 1933–1946
United States Navy ship names |
Roy McMakin (born 1956 in Lander, Wyoming) is a San Diego-based artist, designer, furniture maker, and architect.
Biography
He began his studies at the Museum Art School in Portland, but soon transferred to the University of California, San Diego, where he completed a BA in 1979 and an MA in 1982. At UCSD, he studied... |
Bernardus Marinus "Ben" Pon, Sr. (April 27, 1904 – May 15, 1968) was a Dutch businessman. In 1947, Pon's Automobielhandel ("Pon's Car Dealership"), became the first dealer outside of Germany to sell vehicles manufactured by Volkswagen.
Ben's father, Mijndert Pon, owned a shop (founded in 1898) that sold sewing machine... |
Lesotho–South Africa relations refers to the current and historical bilateral relations of South Africa and Lesotho. Lesotho, which is surrounded by South Africa, depends on South Africa for most of its economic affairs, and its foreign policy is often aligned with that of Pretoria. Both are member states of the Common... |
The Superior Honor Award is an award of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, an independent agency charged with implementing and verifying arms control strategies which has since been merged into the Department of State. Similar versions of the same award exist for the United States Agency for Intern... |
Two Leaves and a Bud manufactures and distributes organic tea. Based in Basalt, Colorado, Two Leaves and a Bud produces organic whole leaf tea that is packaged in pyramid-shaped sachets.
History
Richard Rosenfeld founded Two Leaves and a Bud in the mid 2000s. The company sources black, green, white, and herbal teas f... |
John Patrick Lyons (31 August 1873 – 24 November 1956) was a Canadian diver who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. He was born in Liverpool, England.
In 1912 he competed in both the men's 10 metre platform and men's plain high events.
References
External links
Olympics at Sports-Reference.com: Athlete Profile
18... |
Dimitrios Markos (; born 13 September 2001) is a Greek swimmer. He competed in the men's 200 metre freestyle at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
References
External links
2001 births
Living people
Greek male freestyle swimmers
Swimmers from Athens
Olympic swimmers for Greece
Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Mediterra... |
Skarżyce may refer to the following places in Poland:
Skarżyce, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland)
Skarżyce, Masovian Voivodeship (east-central Poland) |
```yaml
parameters:
- name: isPR
type: boolean
- name: repositoryAlias
type: string
default: self
- name: commit
type: string
default: HEAD
steps:
- template: ../common/checkout.yml
parameters:
isPR: ${{ parameters.isPR }}
repositoryAlias: ${{ parameters.repositoryAlias }}
commit: ${{ param... |
Kamran Samimi () (December 30, 1925 – December 27, 1981) was an Iranian English language professor and a translator. After moving to Jakarta, Indonesia, for 16 years, he returned to Iran in 1974. A follower of the Baháʼí Faith, he became a member of its National Spiritual Assembly in Iran. After the 1979 Iranian Revolu... |
Kimberley Starr (born 1970) is an Australian novelist and teacher. Her debut novel, The Kingdom Where Nobody Dies, was followed by The Book Of Whispers. Her next novel, Torched, was released by Pantera Press in 2020.
Biography
Kimberley Starr was born in 1970 in Morgantown, West Virginia, moving to Australia as a youn... |
The Kurdish Freedom and Democracy Alliance (; ) is an alliance of Kurdish political parties in Turkey founded on 3 April 2023 ahead of the 2023 Turkish general election.
History
On 3 April 2023, in Diyarbakir, nine Kurdish parties led by the Peoples' Democratic Party and the Green Left Party announced the creation of... |
Roger Eugene Nelson (born June 7, 1944) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. Nelson pitched all or part of nine seasons in Major League Baseball between 1967 and 1976 with a record of 29 wins, 32 losses, and 5 saves. Born in Altadena, California, the right-hander was listed as tall and . He attended Mo... |
John McKathmoyll was a priest in Ireland in the 15th century: a Canon of Armagh he was Dean of Clogher in 1458.
References
15th-century Irish Roman Catholic priests
Deans of Clogher |
Heidi and Peter (German: Heidi und Peter) is a 1955 Swiss family drama film directed by Franz Schnyder and starring Heinrich Gretler, Elsbeth Sigmund and Thomas Klameth. It was a sequel to the 1952 film Heidi, which was itself an adaptation of the 1880 novel Heidi by Johanna Spyri. It was the first Swiss film made in c... |
Live at the Roundhouse is a live concert DVD by American dark cabaret duo The Dresden Dolls.
On November 3 and 4, 2006, The Dresden Dolls performed at London's recently restored Roundhouse venue. The shows (and resulting DVD) featured a large number of artistic performers, circus acts, gymnasts, and cabaret dancers, b... |
The 42nd General Assembly of Prince Edward Island was in session from March 2, 1932, to June 15, 1935. The Conservative Party led by James David Stewart formed the government. William J. P. MacMillan became Premier and party leader following Stewart's death in 1933.
Augustine A. MacDonald was elected speaker. Heath St... |
FC Germania Helsinki (FCGH) is a sports club from Greater Helsinki, Finland, playing association football.
History
The club was formed by German-speaking immigrants in 2015 and formally established in 2017. It has been a Registered association and member of the Football Association of Finland since 2018. FC Germania... |
Lukas Frick (born September 15, 1994) is a Swiss professional ice hockey defenseman who is currently playing with Lausanne HC of the National League (NL). He previously played with EHC Kloten.
Playing career
Frick made his National League debut with EHC Kloten during the 2012–13 season. He went on to play 5 seasons wi... |
Yuri Yuryevich Shpiryuk (; born 20 May 1970) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player. He is the manager for FC SKA-Khabarovsk-2.
Club career
He made his professional debut in the Soviet Second League in 1988 for FC SKA Khabarovsk.
References
1970 births
Footballers from Khabarovsk
Living people
... |
Interviews is a Bob Marley interview album, with excerpts from songs. He is interviewed by Neville Willoughby. This was released by Tuff Gong in 1982 but did not receive an international Island release.
Track listing
Side one
"Natural Mystic"
"Trenchtown Rock"
"Redemption Song"
"Babylon System"
"Buffalo Soldier"
"Tim... |
Khalid Hasan (15 April 1934 – 5 February 2009) was a Pakistani journalist and writer. Author and editor of several books, in addition to being a regular columnist for a number of English-language Pakistani newspapers, he is best known for his translations of the short stories of Saadat Hasan Manto and the lyrics of Fai... |
The qualification for the 2005 CONCACAF U-17 Tournament took place between July and December 2004.
Caribbean Zone
Preliminary round
First round
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Second round
First legs
Second legs
Central American Zone
Triangular 1
Hosted in San Salvador, El Salvador.
Triangular 2
Hosted i... |
Köşektaş is a village in Hacıbektaş District, Nevşehir Province in the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey. Its population is 356 (2022).
The village is located on the plains at the northern foot of Cappadocia and is 17 kilometers from the Hacıbektaş and, 240 kilometers from the capital, Ankara. Köşektaş takes its name ... |
Northwest Indiana Regional Bus Authority was a regional public transit agency operating in Northwest Indiana's Lake and Porter counties. Established in 2000, it was known as Regional Transportation Authority until 2005. The agency is responsible for improving public transit options in Northwestern Indiana by consolidat... |
Feminism in South Korea is the origin and history of the movement of feminism or women's rights in South Korea.
Women's suffrage in South Korea was included in Article 11 of the national constitution in 1948. The constitution says "all citizens shall be equal before the law, and there shall be no discrimination in pol... |
```objective-c
const uint8_t FreeSans18pt7bBitmaps[] PROGMEM = {
0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xE9, 0x20, 0x3F, 0xFC, 0xE3, 0xF1,
0xF8, 0xFC, 0x7E, 0x3F, 0x1F, 0x8E, 0x82, 0x41, 0x00, 0x01, 0xC3, 0x80,
0x38, 0x70, 0x06, 0x0E, 0x00, 0xC1, 0x80, 0x38, 0x70, 0x07, 0x0E, 0x0F,
0xFF, 0xF9, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0x3F, 0... |
Comic Book Men is a reality television series on AMC that is set inside Kevin Smith's comic book shop, Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash, in Red Bank, New Jersey.
Series overview
Episodes
Season 1 (2012)
{{Episode table |background=#11AE11 |overall= |season= |title= |airdate= |country=US |viewers= |episodes=
{{Epi... |
Yindi may refer to:
Yothu Yindi, an Australian musical group.
Emperor Yin (disambiguation) (隱帝; Yindi), a posthumous name for some Chinese emperors |
The red-billed quelea (; Quelea quelea), also known as the red-billed weaver or red-billed dioch, is a small—approximately long and weighing —migratory, sparrow-like bird of the weaver family, Ploceidae, native to Sub-Saharan Africa.
It was named by Linnaeus in 1758, who considered it a bunting, but Ludwig Reichenbac... |
Poll Winners Three! is an album by guitarist Barney Kessel with drummer Shelly Manne and bassist Ray Brown, recorded in 1959 and released on the Contemporary label. The album was the third of five to be released by the group.
Reception
The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow called it a "fairly typical but swinging straig... |
Over the years, social media site Reddit has done multiple pranks and event for April Fools' Day.
Merger of Google, Microsoft and Yahoo!
For Reddit's first April Fools' Day in 2006, Reddit creator Alexis Ohanian posted a statement on the now archived r/reddit.com that claimed that the companies Google, Microsoft and Y... |
Gina Kaus (born Regina Wiener; 21 October 1893, Vienna, Austria – 23 December 1985, Los Angeles, California) was an Austrian-American novelist and screenwriter.
Life and career
Regina Wiener, the daughter of money broker Max Wiener, attended an all-girls school. Regina married the Viennese musician Josef Zirner in 191... |
The 2019 LA Galaxy season was the club's twenty-fourth season in existence, their twenty-fourth in Major League Soccer.
Players
Squad information
At the end of the season.
Transfers
Transfers in
Draft picks
Draft picks are not automatically signed to the team roster. Only those who are signed to a contract will... |
The 1948 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 1948 college football season. The Vandals were led by second-year head coach Dixie Howell and were members of the Pacific Coast Conference.
Idaho was ranked at No. 90 in the final Litkenhous Difference by Score System ratings for 1948.
H... |
Nosratollah Vahdat (; 7 September 1925 – 6 October 2020) was an Iranian comedian, actor, and film director. He is best known in Iran for his Esfahani-accent.
Biography
Nosratollah Vahdat was born on 7 September 1925 in Isfahan, Pahlavi Iran. He was a pioneer of the Isfahan Theater.
In 1964, he won the Golden Dolphi... |
USS Gazelle was a side-wheel steamer acquired by the Union Navy for duty with the Mississippi River Squadron.
Commissioned at Cairo, Illinois, in 1864
She was the first ship to be named Gazelle by the Navy after being purchased at Cincinnati, Ohio, 21 November 1863, as the Emma Brown. She was commissioned February 1... |
Orchard Hills may refer to:
Fountainhead-Orchard Hills, Maryland, a census-designated place in Maryland
Orchard Hills, New South Wales, a suburb in New South Wales
Orchard Hills, Irvine, California, a village in Irvine, California
See also
Orchard Hill (disambiguation) |
Alexander Zverev (; born 20 April 1997) is a German professional tennis player. He has been ranked by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) as high as world No. 2, and was continuously ranked in the top 10 from July 2017 to November 2022. Zverev's singles career highlights include a gold medal at the 2020 Tokyo... |
Angela Rosalind Runcie, Baroness Runcie (née Turner; 23 January 1932 12 January 2012) was an English classical pianist and the wife of Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Family and early life
Runcie's father was J. W. Cecil Turner, a Worcestershire county cricketer and a recipient of the Military Cross, who ser... |
Luis Herrera de la Fuente (April 25, 1916 – December 5, 2014) was a Mexican conductor, pianist, violinist, composer and writer of the 20th century. De la Fuente gained many recognitions and awards in Mexico and worldwide. He conducted the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional of Mexico for 18 years. He was also conductor of the ... |
John Riker Brady (March 9, 1822 – March 16, 1891) was an American judge, a justice of the New York Supreme Court, and best known for administering the presidential oath of office to Chester A. Arthur.
Life and career
John Riker Brady was born in New York City in March 9, 1822, the son of Thomas S. Brady, an immigrant ... |
Loyola Medicine, also known as Loyola University Health System, is a quaternary-care system with a main medical center campus in the western suburbs of Chicago, in the U.S. state of Illinois. The medical center campus is located in Maywood, west of the Chicago Loop and east of Oak Brook. The heart of the medical cen... |
The Universitas Negeri Semarang (abbreviated UNNES ) is a public university in the city of Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia. The university is located in Gunungpati, a highland area of Semarang City, Central Java. UNNES has eight faculties: Education, Language and Arts, Social Sciences, Mathematics and Science, Engin... |
The Mac OS nanokernel is an operating system kernel serving as the basis of most PowerPC based system software versions 7 through 9 of the classic Mac OS, predating Mac OS X.
The initial revision of this software is a single tasking system which delegates most tasks to an emulator running the Motorola 68000 series (68... |
PNRA may refer to:
National Antarctic Research Program (Italian: ), the Italian Antarctic research program
Pakistan Nuclear Regulatory Authority, Pakistan's federal agency responsible for nuclear regulation
Panera Bread, a chain of bakery-café fast casual restaurants |
Sewell Mill Creek is a tributary of Sope Creek in Marietta, Georgia, United States. Via Sope Creek and the Chattahoochee River, it is part of the Apalachicola River basin, draining to the Gulf of Mexico.
References
Rivers of Georgia (U.S. state)
Marietta, Georgia
Rivers of Cobb County, Georgia |
The West Indies Sugar & Trading Company Ltd (Wistco) is a partnership between the government of Barbados and the private sector in order to help support the Barbados sugar industry, primarily through the production, marketing and export of a premium sugar brand, Plantation Reserve.
The company is also involved in trad... |
The 233rd Battalion (Canadiens-Français du Nord-Ouest), CEF was a unit in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during the First World War. Based in Edmonton, Alberta, the unit began recruiting in early 1916 throughout western Canada. The battalion was absorbed into the 178th (Canadien-Français) Battalion, CEF in March 19... |
Wayne Dumont, Jr. (June 25, 1914 – March 19, 1992) was an American Republican Party politician from New Jersey. He represented Warren County in the New Jersey Senate from 1952 to 1966 and northwestern New Jersey more broadly from 1968 until his retirement in 1990. He was the Republican nominee for Governor of New Jerse... |
Nicolas Petrovic (born 21 November 1969) is a French-Yugoslavian businessman and the Chief Executive of Siemens France since 2018.
Early life
He was born in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris, to a French mother and a Yugoslav father (Petrović is the common spelling). He has an older and younger sister. He gained a deg... |
Harald Eriksson (or Ericsson, 22 September 1921 – 20 May 2015) was a Swedish cross-country skier who won the silver medal in the 50 km event at the 1948 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz. The same year he won the 50 km at the Holmenkollen ski festival. He had to withdraw from the 50 km race at the 1952 Games due to a high ... |
Loaded is a British Comedy drama produced by Hillbilly Television and Keshet UK for Channel 4. It is based on the Israeli series Mesudarim (). The show premiered on 8 May 2017 and stars Jim Howick, Samuel Anderson, Jonny Sweet and Nick Helm as a group of tech entrepreneurs in their mid-20’s who are about to shut their ... |
I Don't Speak English () is a 1995 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina.
A sequel entitled Banzai was released in 1997.
Cast
Paolo Villaggio as Sergio Colombo
Paola Quattrini as Paola Colombo
Laura Migliacci as Betta Colombo
Ian Price as Frederick Livingstone
Carolyn Pickles as Linda Livingstone
Chiara Nosch... |
Mozambique competed at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships in Kazan, Russia from 24 July to 9 August 2015.
Swimming
Mozambican swimmers have achieved qualifying standards in the following events (up to a maximum of 2 swimmers in each event at the A-standard entry time, and 1 at the B-standard):
Men
Women
Mixed
... |
Julien Boutter was the defending champion, but lost in the second round this year.
Santiago Ventura won the title, defeating Dominik Hrbatý 6–3, 1–6, 6–4 in the final. Notably, this was Ventura's first ATP Tour-level appearance.
Seeds
Dominik Hrbatý (final)
Younes El Aynaoui (withdrew)
Antony Dupuis (quarterfi... |
Michael Alexandru Perelló López (born 11 July 1998) is a Honduran professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Real España.
References
Living people
1998 births
Honduran men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional de Honduras players
Real C.D. España players
F... |
Miljana Knežević is a Serbian sprint canoer who has competed since the late 2000s. She won a bronze medal in the K-4 200 m event at the 2007 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Duisburg.
References
Living people
Serbian female canoeists
ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships medalists in kayak
Year of birth missing... |
Péter István Mészáros (born 15 July 1943) is a Hungarian-American theoretical astrophysicist,
best known for the Mészáros effect
in cosmology and for his work on gamma-ray bursts.
Life
Péter Mészáros was born in 1943 in Budapest, Hungary, and grew up in Liège, Belgium and Buenos Aires,
Argentina, where he did his und... |
Pethakamsetti Gana Venkata Reddy Naidu (P.G.V.R) is an Indian politician.
Early life
He was born in Gopalapatnam, Visakhapatnam District. His father is P.Appala Narasimham, Former M.P. for Anakapalle.
Sports Career
He is an International Volleyball player. He is President of Andhra Pradesh Volley Ball Association(... |
is a Japanese anime television series. It is a spin-off of Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise, serving as the franchise's second television series after Lilo & Stitch: The Series. The anime series aired in Japan from October 2008 to June 2011, later receiving additional television specials in 2012 and 2015. It features a... |
Wesółka may refer to the following places in Poland:
Wesółka, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland)
Wesółka, Masovian Voivodeship (east-central Poland) |
Honest Lullaby is the nineteenth studio album (and twenty-first overall) by Joan Baez, released in 1979. It would be her final album on CBS Records' Portrait imprint; it also stood as her last studio album issued in the U.S. until the release of her 1987 album, Recently.
The autobiographical title song was written for... |
Irma Valová (born 26 July 1965) is a Czech basketball player. She competed in the women's tournament at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
References
1965 births
Living people
Czech women's basketball players
Olympic basketball players for Czechoslovakia
Basketball players at the 1988 Summer Olympics
Sportspeople from Zlín
Co... |
Amok is the third album by the Finnish metal band Sentenced, released through Century Media in 1995. Though still mostly rooted in the death metal genre, the album takes the melodic death metal direction of 1993's North from Here a step further with elements of traditional heavy metal and doom metal, along with element... |
Paul Alan Levi (born June 30, 1941, in New York City) is an American composer whose compositions have been performed in Carnegie Hall, among other major venues in United States and Europe, as well as on national television. He is the composer of the 1971-1984 PBS identity music.
Biography
Levi received a B.A. in music... |
Achime () is a South Korean indie rock band. The band currently consists of Kwon Seonwook, Kim Sooyeol, Lee Sangkyu, Kim Kyeongjoo and Kim Jeongmin. Since their formation in 2008, the band has released two studio albums Hunch (2010) and Overcome (2012).
Career
Achime was formed in 2008, Kwon Seonwook offered a band t... |
The Solo routine competition of the 2014 European Aquatics Championships was held on 13–17 August.
Results
The technical round was held at 09:00 on 13 August. The free round was held at 10:00 on 15 August. The final was held at 10:00 on 17 August.
Green denotes finalists
References
2014 European Aquatics Championsh... |
The DKW Monza was a sports car built on an Auto Union DKW base. Named after the world-famous Italian Grand Prix circuit, the car set five world records in 1956.
After the series of wins by the DKW 3=6 'Sonderklasse' in European touring car racing and rallying in 1954 and 1955, two racing drivers started to develop a s... |
In probability theory, the martingale representation theorem states that a random variable that is measurable with respect to the filtration generated by a Brownian motion can be written in terms of an Itô integral with respect to this Brownian motion.
The theorem only asserts the existence of the representation and d... |
Michelle Cruz Gonzales (born October 29, 1969, in Los Angeles, California) is a musician, author, and college English instructor. She is a founding member and drummer of the groundbreaking all-female hardcore punk band Spitboy. Gonzales is featured in the Green Day-produced documentary Turn It Around: The Story of East... |
Lawrence Oglethorpe Gostin (born October 19, 1949) is an American law professor who specializes in public health law. He was a Fulbright Fellow and is best known as the author of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act and as a significant contributor to journals on medicine and law.
Early life and education
Lar... |
Ralph W. "Bud" Leavitt Jr. (January 13, 1917 – December 20, 1994) was a Maine newspaperman who was executive sports editor of the Bangor Daily News, and a longtime outdoor columnist recognized statewide. In addition to his writing, Leavitt hosted one of Maine's earliest television shows, which was devoted to fishing, h... |
Nareish Kumar is a Fiji Indian politician who won the Labasa Open Constituency, one of the 25 open seats, for the Fiji Labour Party during the 1999 elections for the House of Representatives.
On 19 May 2000, he was among the 43 members of the People's Coalition Government, led by Mahendra Chaudhry, taken hostage by Ge... |
Westhofen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
Geography
Location
Westhofen lies between Worms (roughly 12 km to the southeast), Mainz and Alzey in Rhenish Hesse and is part of the Verban... |
The 2010-11 season was Dukla Prague's fourth consecutive season in the Czech 2. Liga. The club finished the season in first place, winning promotion to the Gambrinus liga. Dukla reached the top of the table after thirteen games, and stayed there for the rest of the season, maintaining an unbeaten record at home for the... |
Dumbleton is a surname, and may refer to:
Horatio Norris Dumbleton (1858–1935), English cricketer and officer in the Royal Engineers
John Dumbleton ( 1310 – 1349), English philosopher
Lionel Jack Dumbleton (1905–1976), New Zealand entomologist |
The Martinet dioxindole synthesis was first reported in 1913 by J. Martinet. It is a chemical reaction in which a primary or secondary aniline or substituted aromatic amine is condensed with ethyl or methyl ester of mesoxalic acid to make a dioxindole in the absence of oxygen.
Proposed mechanism
In the first step, t... |
George Summerbee (22 October 1914 – 19 April 1955) was an English professional footballer who played as a wing-half in The Football League for four clubs. He was father of Mike Summerbee and grandfather of Nicky Summerbee, who both played for Manchester City.
Playing and managerial career
Summerbee was born in Winches... |
Olfactory receptor 3A2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the OR3A2 gene.
Olfactory receptors interact with odorant molecules in the nose, to initiate a neuronal response that triggers the perception of a smell. The olfactory receptor proteins are members of a large family of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) ... |
Agha Mustafa Hassan is a Pakistani television and film actor.
He's known for his roles in the revenge drama such as Sang-e-Mar Mar (2016), the horror series Neeli Zinda Hai (2021), the mystery thriller Dour (2021) and the romance series Tere Bin.
He was also seen in the web series Mrs. & Mr. Shameem opposite Saba Qam... |
The siege of Royan (French: Siège de Royan) was a siege accomplished by the young French king Louis XIII in 1622, against the Protestant stronghold of Royan. This siege followed the siege of Montauban, in which Louis XIII had failed against the Huguenot city.
The siege started at the beginning of May 1622. After 6 day... |
Vespel is the trademark of a range of durable high-performance polyimide-based plastics made by DuPont. The one shown in the structure on the right was the first to be commercialized.
Characteristics and applications
Vespel is mostly used in aerospace, semiconductor, and transportation technology. It combines heat r... |
The Sunrise Historic District, also known as the community of Sunrise, Washington, is located at approximately on a ridge overlooking the northeast side of Mount Rainier in Mount Rainier National Park. The district comprises seven individual structures designed in accordance with the principles of the National Park Se... |
Oleksandr Oleksandrovych Masalov (; ; born 22 January 1997) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Leon Saturn Ramenskoye.
Club career
Masalov is a youth product of Dynamo Kyiv. In 2016 he moved to the Shakhtar Donetsk academy.
Kolos Kovalivka
Masalov started his senior career with Kolo... |
Zhao Guocai (; 1879–1966) was a Chinese educator and diplomat.
Biography
Zhao was born in Shanghai in 1879. In 1906 he graduated from St. John's University, Shanghai. Zhao was sent abroad to study at the expense of the Qing government. He studied politics at Cornell University and the University of Wisconsin. He retur... |
Godfried Aduobe (born 29 October 1975) is a former Ghanaian football midfielder.
Playing career
Aduobe started to play football in his hometown of Accra in Ghana. He moved to Europe by joining the youth academy of Italian club Torino Calcio in 1993, before signing for Swiss club BSC Old Boys during the same year and g... |
What We Do Is Secret is a novel by Thorn Kief Hillsbery, published by Villard in 2005.
What We Do Is Secret takes place in Los Angeles in 1981, six months after the death of Darby Crash (lead singer of the Germs). It is narrated by a gay street kid named Rockets Redglare, who knew Darby personally. All the action occu... |
Placostylus eddystonensis is a species of air-breathing land snail, a pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Bothriembryontidae.
Subspecies:
Placostylus eddystonensis bavayi (Crosse & Marie, 1868)
Placostylus eddystonensis eddystonensis (L. Pfeiffer, 1855)
Placostylus eddystonensis savesi Crosse, 1886
Subspeci... |
Brian Earl Thompson (born August 28, 1959) is an American actor. His career began with a small role in the 1984 film The Terminator. He played the villainous "Night Slasher" in the 1986 film Cobra. His first named role was on Werewolf, a horror series that ran during Fox's inaugural broadcasting year of 1987–1988. T... |
Mount Frankland National Park is a national park in the South West region of Western Australia, south of Perth. The park is part of the larger Walpole Wilderness Area that was established in 2004, an international biodiversity hotspot.
Geography
It covers an area of 371.22 square kilometres in the low granite hills t... |
The superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle is a quadrilateral muscle of the pharynx. It is the uppermost and thinnest of the three pharyngeal constrictors.
The muscle is divided into four parts according to its four distincts origins: a pterygopharyngeal, buccopharyngeal, mylopharyngeal, and a glossopharyngeal part. T... |
"The Call" is a song written by Gene MacLellan. MacLellan originally released a version the song in 1970 that reached #15 on the Canadian Country chart and #91 on the Canadian Top Singles chart.
Anne Murray recording
Anne Murray recorded her first version on her 1970 album, Honey, Wheat and Laughter. In 1975, she r... |
Volodar Glebovich of Minsk was a prince of Minsk belonging to the so-called Polotsk dynasty (or the Polotski) after the city and the principality Polotsk from where it originated. He was the son of Gleb Vseslavich of Minsk (death 1119) and Anastasia, a daughter of Yaropolk Izyaslavich. Volodar died after 1167, possibly... |
Veron ka Math is the originating point of Banas River, situated in the Kumbhalgarh block of Rajsamand district in the state of Rajasthan. It is 8 km west of the Kumbhalgarh on the NH 162 Ext. There is a Shiva temple and other deities in the temple complex.
See also
Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary
References
Externa... |
Application Networks Inc. (AppNet) was a Palo Alto-based company, provider of JRisk, a packaged financial risk management software to use on-premises or as part of cloud computing environments. Its customers included global banks. Banks used JRisk for the risk management of their portfolio of securities, OTC contracts ... |
Labeobarbus dainellii is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Labeobarbus which is endemic to Lake Tana in Ethiopia.
References
Endemic fauna of Ethiopia
dainellii
Fish described in 1940
Fish of Lake Tana |
Miguel Ángel Barberena Vega (4 August 1928 – 16 June 1999) was a Mexican Naval officer and politician.
Early life
Miguel Ángel Barberena Vega was born in Jesús María, Aguascalientes, the capital city of the Free and Sovereign State of Aguascalientes, Mexico, on August 4, 1928. (One source asserts he was born in Madri... |
Victoria Williams (born 5 April 1990) is a professional footballer who plays as a centre back. She last played for Women's Super League club Brighton & Hove Albion. Born and raised in England, she is a member of the Jamaica women's national team.
Williams joined Doncaster Rovers Belles as an eight-year-old, and return... |
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