text stringlengths 1 22.8M |
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```javascript
'use strict';
let $$ArrayBuffer = {};
let $$Int8Array = {};
let $$Uint8Array = {};
let $$Uint8ClampedArray = {};
let $$Int16Array = {};
let $$Uint16Array = {};
let $$Int32Array = {};
let $$Uint32Array = {};
let $$Float32Array = {};
let $$Float64Array = {};
let $$DataView = {};
exports.$$Array... |
Recent estimates
Administered as a Union territory directly by Central government.
Timeline by Census
Literacy by Social Group
Literacy rate for different castes
Literacy rate by different religions
See also
Literacy in India
Education in India
Gender inequality in India
References
Notes
Sources
Furth... |
Naaja Nathanielsen (born 6 December 1975) is a Greenlandic politician of the Inuit Ataqatigiit party. She was a member of the Inatsisartut (the Greenlandic parliament) from 2009 to 2016, and was re-elected in 2021. She has been the director of Greenland's department of prisons and probation from 2016, and became minist... |
Ivanovskoye () is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Ivanovskoye Rural Settlement, Ilyinsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 384 as of 2010. There are 14 streets.
References
Rural localities in Perm Krai |
On-premises wiring (customer premises wiring) is customer-owned telecommunication transmission or distribution lines. The transmission lines may be metallic (copper) or optical fiber, and may be installed within or between buildings.
Premises wiring may consist of horizontal wiring, vertical wiring, and backbone cabli... |
Crossfire is a board game created by the Milton Bradley Company in 1971. The object of the game is to score goals by pushing one of the two pucks into the opposing player's goal. This task is accomplished by shooting small metal ball bearings at the pucks using the attached guns. The earliest version of the game featu... |
Ciceribacter lividus is a nitrogen fixing, Gram-negative, aerobic and motile bacterium from the genus Ciceribacter which has been isolated from rhizosphere soil from the plant Cicer arietinum in Kannivadi, India.
References
External links
Type strain of Ciceribacter lividus at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metad... |
Plymouth, Pennsylvania, sits on the west side of Pennsylvania's Wyoming Valley, wedged between the Susquehanna River and the Shawnee Mountain range. Just below the mountain are hills that surround the town and form a natural amphitheater that separates the town from the rest of the valley. Below the hills, the flat lan... |
Rohan De Silva is a Sri Lankan pianist. De Silva initially studied at Isipathana College, Colombo and later he migrated abroad to study at the Royal Academy of Music, London and The Juilliard School, New York, while working closely with violin pedagogue Dorothy DeLay. He has been awarded numerous prizes and scholarshi... |
Boonchu Phu Narak () is a 1988 Thai comedy film directed by Bhandit Rittakol and released by Five Star Production. It tells the story of Boonchu (Santisuk Promsiri), a naïve country boy who goes to Bangkok for university, falls in love with Mo (Chintara Sukapatana), and, with his companions, has to rescue her when she ... |
Sir Robert Pigot, 2nd Baronet (20 September 1720 – 1 August 1796) was a British Army officer during the American Revolutionary War.
Life
Robert Pigot was born in London, England in 1720. His two brothers were George Pigot, 1st Baron Pigot, Governor of Madras, India and Admiral Hugh Pigot, Commander-in-Chief of the Wes... |
Sir Tom John Marsters, (born 4 August 1945) is the fifth and current King's Representative to the Cook Islands (formerly Queen's Representative). He is a former Deputy Prime Minister of the Cook Islands, Foreign Minister, and Deputy Leader of the Cook Islands Party.
Personal life
Marsters was born on Palmerston Isla... |
State Route 147 (SR 147) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of Virginia. The state highway runs from U.S. Route 60 (US 60) in Midlothian east to US 60 in Richmond. In various places, it is known as Huguenot Road, River Road, Cary Street Road and Main Street. SR 147 connects Midlothian with the West End of ... |
Nemophora congruella is a moth of the Adelidae family.
Distribution
This infrequent transpalaearctic species is present from France and Belgium to Poland and Romania and from Denmark to Italy. It is also present in Russia.
Habitat
These moths live in mountain regions with deciduous and coniferous trees.
Description
... |
Cwmwysg (Welsh for "Usk valley") is a small rural community southwest of Trecastle in the valley of the Usk river, Powys, Wales.
It includes the Saron Independent Chapel, originally built in 1822 and rebuilt in 1856. The humpback stone river bridge over the Usk is Grade II listed.
The Welsh painter Aneurin Jones (193... |
Tetrasodium pyrophosphate, also called sodium pyrophosphate, tetrasodium phosphate or TSPP, is an inorganic compound with the formula Na4P2O7. As a salt, it is a white, water-soluble solid. It is composed of pyrophosphate anion and sodium ions. Toxicity is approximately twice that of table salt when ingested orally. Al... |
MS Windoc was a lake freighter or laker, initially constructed as an ocean-going bulk carrier in West Germany in 1959. Entering service that year as Rhine Ore, the ship was renamed Steelcliffe Hall in 1977 and reconstructed as a laker. In 1988 the laker was renamed Windoc and in 2001, was involved in a collision with ... |
Hives is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Ernest Hives, 1st Baron Hives of Duffield (1886-1965), Chairman of Rolls-Royce Ltd
Harry Hives (1901–1974), Canadian Anglican bishop
Zoe Hives (born 1996), Australian tennis player
See also
Baron Hives, a Peerage of the United Kingdom
Hives (disambigu... |
Tsar Simeon (also Symeon) I the Great ( ) ruled over Bulgaria from 893 to 927, during the First Bulgarian Empire. Simeon's successful campaigns against the Byzantines, Magyars and Serbs led Bulgaria to its greatest territorial expansion ever, making it the most powerful state in contemporary Eastern and Southeast Eur... |
The 1988–89 Southern Jaguars basketball team represented Southern University during the 1988–89 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Jaguars, led by head coach Ben Jobe, played their home games at the F. G. Clark Center and were members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. They finished the season 20–11, 10... |
Fr. Otto Müller (English: Otto Mueller) (1870-1944) was a German Roman Catholic priest, active in the Christian Worker's movement and the German Resistance against Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime. Implicated in the July Plot, Müller died in custody in 1944.
Biography
Müller was ordained as a Catholic priest in 1894. He be... |
```go
package vm_color_indent
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/goccy/go-json/internal/encoder"
)
func DebugRun(ctx *encoder.RuntimeContext, b []byte, codeSet *encoder.OpcodeSet) ([]byte, error) {
var code *encoder.Opcode
if (ctx.Option.Flag & encoder.HTMLEscapeOption) != 0 {
code = codeSet.EscapeKeyCode
} else {
... |
Naper is a village in Boyd County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 89 at the 2020 census, up from 84 at the 2010 census.
History
Naper was founded in 1892. It was named for Ralph Naper, an original owner of the town site.
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total are... |
Pasandarreh (; also known as Pīsh Darreh and Pish Qal‘eh) is a village in Gifan Rural District, Garmkhan District, Bojnord County, North Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 248, in 55 families.
References
Populated places in Bojnord County |
The Willard Parker Hospital (1885-1955) for communicable diseases was located on East 16th Street along the East River in New York City. It was founded by the City of New York in 1885. It was named after Willard Parker, a prominent physician and surgeon, who at the time was a member of the Citizens' Association which c... |
Zach Williams & The Reformation was an American rock band formed in Jonesboro, Arkansas in 2007 by the group of Zach Williams (acoustic guitar, harmonica and vocals), Red Dorton (bass guitar and vocals), Robby Rigsbee (slide guitar and rhythm guitar), Josh Copeland (lead guitar, rhythm guitar and vocals) and Evan Wilon... |
Vasily Ivanovich Modestov (, 24 January 1839, Valday, Novgorod Governorate, Imperial Russia, — 13 February 1907, Rome, Italy) was a Russian historian, philologist, publicist and translator.
A Saint Petersburg University graduate who lectured at the Odessa, Kazan and Kiev Universities, as well as his alma mater (in 188... |
A Primate's Memoir: A Neuroscientist's Unconventional Life Among the Baboons is a 2001 book by the American biologist Robert Sapolsky. The book documents Sapolsky's years in Kenya studying baboons as a graduate student. The chapters alternate between describing observations of a troop of baboons and the wildly differen... |
St-Hubert BBQ Ltd is a chain of Canadian casual dining restaurants best known for its rotisserie chicken. St-Hubert is most popular in Quebec, and in other French-Canadian areas such as Eastern Ontario and New Brunswick. St-Hubert is the 16th largest restaurant chain operating in Canada. The chain enjoys the highest ... |
John Pollard was a 16th-century Archdeacon of Wiltshire, Archdeacon of Cornwall, Archdeacon of Barnstaple and Archdeacon of Totnes.
He was one of eleven sons of Sir Lewis Pollard (c.1465–1526) of King's Nympton, Devon, MP for Totnes and Justice of the Common Pleas, by his wife Agnes Hext. He was educated at Oxford Uni... |
Richard Baker Wingfield-Baker (sometimes Richard Baker Wingfield Baker or Richard Wingfield Baker; born Richard Baker Wingfield) (1802 – 25 March 1880) MP, DL, was a Liberal Party politician, High Sheriff and deputy lieutenant in the English county of Essex. Like his father, maternal grandfather, half-brother, and brot... |
Lyubov Belyakova (born 10 December 1967) is a Russian biathlete. She competed in women's sprint event at the 1994 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
1967 births
Living people
Biathletes at the 1994 Winter Olympics
Russian female biathletes
Olympic biathletes for Russia
Place of birth missing (living people... |
Senecio murinus is a plant species of the genus Senecio and family Asteraceae.
References
External links
murinus
Flora of Chile |
Mwana Kupona binti Msham (born on Pate Island, died c. 1865) was a Swahili poet of the 19th century, author of a poem called Utendi wa Mwana Kupona ("The Book of Mwana Kupona"), which is one of the most well-known works of early Swahili literature.
Relatively little is known about her life. Her grandson Muhammed bin ... |
The Neftçi 2020–21 season was Neftchi Baku's 29th Azerbaijan Premier League season. Neftchi will compete in the Azerbaijan Premier League and in the Azerbaijan Cup and Europa League.
Season overview
On 20 June, Jabir Amirli joined Neftçi from Keşla on a two-year contract.
On 8 July, Neftçi signed a new contract with ... |
Henri Eugene Xavier Louis Hyvernat (30 June 1858 – 29 May 1941) was a Franco-American Coptologist, Semitist and orientalist.
Life
Henri Hyvnernat was born in Saint-Julien-en-Jarret (now part of L'Horme, Loire department) on 30 June 1858, the fifth of nine children of Claude and M. Leonide (née Meyrieux) Hyvernat. His... |
Mercury(II) thiocyanate (Hg(SCN)2) is an inorganic chemical compound, the coordination complex of Hg2+ and the thiocyanate anion. It is a white powder. It will produce a large, winding "snake" when ignited, an effect known as the Pharaoh's serpent.
Synthesis and structure
The first synthesis of mercury thiocyanate wa... |
Thathi Bhai is a village in Tehsil Bagha Purana, District Moga in Punjab, India.
Location
Thathi Bhai lies in-between small towns Kotkapura and Bagha Purana. It acts as merging point for bus routes from Kotkapura, Moga (via Bagha Purana) and Bathinda (via Bargari or Bhagta Bhai ka).
Thathi Bhai () is located at the M... |
José Toribio Losoya, (April 11, 1808March 6, 1836) was a former Mexican soldier, a Texian military participant in the Siege of Bexar and Battle of the Alamo defender.
Early life and family
Losoya was born in San Antonio on April 11, 1808, to Ventura Losoya and Concepción de Los Angeles Charlé. Their old stone house wa... |
Elie Che, also known as Elijah Williams (10 April 1998 – 31 August 2020), was a British transgender woman. Her death in August 2020 became high-profile due to her prominence in the London queer nightlife scene, as well as the cultural focus on the deaths of transgender people due to their disproportionately shorter lif... |
William Burke Belknap the younger (1885–1965) was the son of William Richardson Belknap and Alice Trumbull Silliman. He was an entrepreneur in the family of William Burke Belknap, the elder (1811–1884), son of Morris Burke Belknap of Brimfield, Massachusetts, who was engaged in the iron furnace industry and died in 187... |
Kenneth Mervyn Lancelot Hadfield Banting (known as Mervyn; 8 September 1937 – 8 February 2022) was an Anglican priest, who was an Archdeacon of the Isle of Wight.
Banting was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge and Cuddesdon College. He was ordained deacon in 1965 and priest in 1966 and began his career as Chapla... |
The 1960 Soviet football championship was the 28th seasons of competitive football in the Soviet Union and the 22nd among teams of sports societies and factories. Torpedo Moscow won the championship becoming the Soviet domestic champions for the first time.
Honours
Notes = Number in parentheses is the times that club... |
The 2022 Senior League World Series took place from July 30–August 6 in Easley, South Carolina. Guayama, Puerto Rico defeated Norfolk, Virginia in the championship game. This was the first Senior Little League World Series held since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Teams
Results
United States BracketInternational BracketWorl... |
Abdul Halim is a Jatiya Party (Ershad) politician and the former Member of Parliament of Jessore-6.
Career
Halim was elected to parliament from Jessore-6 as a Jatiya Party candidate in 1986.
References
Jatiya Party politicians
Living people
4th Jatiya Sangsad members
Year of birth missing (living people) |
Yatonmilk (, YTNMLK, Romanized also as Yatanmilk, Yaton Milk, Yatan-Milk) was a Phoenician King of Sidon ( 515–486 BC), and a vassal to the Achaemenid king of kings Darius I.
Etymology
The Romanized form Yatonmilk comes from the Phoenician 𐤉𐤕𐤍𐤌𐤋𐤊 (YTNMLK), meaning "the king gives" from 𐤉𐤕𐤍 (Yaton, "to giv... |
Tangzhuang (), sometimes called Tang suit, is a kind of Chinese jacket with Manchu origins and Han influences, characterized with a mandarin collar closing at the front with frog buttons. It is an updated form of the Qing magua, itself a more fashionable adaptation of the riding jacket once worn by Manchu horsemen. Now... |
Juraj Bezúch (born 20 December 1993) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who currently playing for Vlci Žilina of the Slovak 1. Liga.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1993 births
Living people
Ice hockey people from Skalica
Slovak ice hockey left wing... |
Frederica Alexandrina Sagor Maas (; July 6, 1900 – January 5, 2012) was an American dramatist and playwright, screenwriter, memoirist, and author,
the youngest daughter of Jewish immigrants from Russia. As an essayist, Maas was best known for a detailed, tell-all memoir of her time spent in early Hollywood. A supercen... |
Glyn Davies (31 May 1932 – 7 February 2013) was a Welsh professional footballer who made 217 appearances in the Football League playing as a defender for Derby County and Swansea Town. Davies then became player-manager of Southern League side Yeovil Town, before in 1965 he was appointed Swansea Town manager, with Yeov... |
Avrainville is the name of three communes in France:
Avrainville, Meurthe-et-Moselle
Avrainville, Vosges
Avrainville, Essonne |
Mithun Shyam is an Indian Bharatanatyam dancer, choreographer and teacher based in Bengaluru. He has contributed to social and gender-based themes through classical dance.
Career
Shyam is a student of Guru Padmini Ramachandran and is trained in the Vazhuvoor style of Bharatanatyam. He is an 'A' graded artiste of Doord... |
The Men's giant slalom competition of the Calgary 1988 Olympics was held at Nakiska.
The defending world champion was Pirmin Zurbriggen of Switzerland, who was also the defending World Cup giant slalom champion, while Alberto Tomba was leader of the 1988 World Cup.
Results
References
Men's giant slalom
Winter Olym... |
Garnqueen railway station served the suburb of Garnqueen, North Lanarkshire, Scotland, from 1849 to 1851 on the Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway.
History
The station was opened on 10 December 1849 by the Monkland Railways. It was a short-lived station, only being open for two years, closing on 10 December 1851.
Re... |
Vanguard Automotive Group was a vehicle rental company based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.
Vanguard purchased ANC Rental, owner of National Car Rental and Alamo Rent A Car. It had a fleet of nearly 300,000 vehicles, mainly from Ford and Chrysler, and operated in over 1,500 locations. In 2007, Enterprise agreed to purchase ... |
The Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP) was a subsidiary body within the structure of the United Nations. It was established in 1982, and was one of the six working groups overseen by the Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, the main subsidiary body of the United Nations Commission... |
Gray's General Store is a general store located at 4 Main Street in Adamsville, Rhode Island. Founded in 1788, it operated for almost 225 years and was reputed to be the oldest continually operating general store in the United States.
The store featured an old-fashioned marble soda fountain, cigar and tobacco cases, a... |
Myrmecia imaii is a species of ant in the genus Myrmecia. Described by Robert Taylor in 2015, the species is endemic to Australia in Western Australia, particularly in very south-western areas.
References
Myrmeciinae
Hymenoptera of Australia
Insects described in 2015
Insects of Australia |
```java
package org.apache.bcel.generic;
/* ====================================================================
*
* reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* 1. Redistributions of source ... |
In the theory of algebraic groups, a Borel subgroup of an algebraic group G is a maximal Zariski closed and connected solvable algebraic subgroup. For example, in the general linear group GLn (n x n invertible matrices), the subgroup of invertible upper triangular matrices is a Borel subgroup.
For groups realized over... |
Bab Tiouka () is a small town and rural commune in Sidi Kacem Province of the Rabat-Salé-Kénitra region of Morocco. At the time of the 2004 census, the commune had a total population of 2,042 people living in 1,212 households.
References
Populated places in Sidi Kacem Province
Rural communes of Rabat-Salé-Kénitra |
Shahjahan Hawlader Sujan (died on 3 July 2001) was a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and a Jatiya Sangsad member from Brahmanbaria-6 constituency winning by-election in 1994 and general election in February 1996. He served as the vice president of Haji Mohammad Mohsin Hall Students Union of the University of Dh... |
Beşçeşme is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Pazarcık, Kahramanmaraş Province, Turkey. The village is inhabited by Sunni Turks and had a population of 903 in 2022.
References
Neighbourhoods in Pazarcık District |
James Heywood (28 May 1810 – 17 October 1897) was a British MP, philanthropist and social reformer.
Early life
James Heywood was born on 28 May 1810 in Manchester, Lancashire. He was the son of banker Nathaniel and Ann (née Percival) Heywood, and was the brother of Benjamin Heywood and Thomas Heywood and grandson of T... |
The George Price Centre for Peace and Development is a not-for-profit/non-governmental organization, established in 2000 through the collaborative effort of a group of admirers in honor of the Right Honorable George Cadle Price, P.C. (Jan. 15, 1919 – Sept. 19, 2011) - Belize’s first Prime Minister and National Hero. Th... |
Parmelia protosignifera is a species of foliose lichen in the large family Parmeliaceae. Found in Australasia, it was described as a new species in 1988 by lichenologists John Elix and Jen Johnston. The type specimen was collected on sheltered granite ledges in Eucalyptus woodland on the eastern slopes on Tinderry Peak... |
Kristina Knejp (born 24 February 1974 in Stockholm) is a Swedish rower.
References
1974 births
Living people
Swedish female rowers
Sportspeople from Stockholm
Olympic rowers for Sweden
Rowers at the 1996 Summer Olympics
World Rowing Championships medalists for Sweden
20th-century Swedish women |
```xml
import chai from 'chai';
import chaiAsPromised from 'chai-as-promised';
import { parseBody } from './parseBody';
chai.use(chaiAsPromised);
const { expect } = chai;
describe('Verifier', () => {
describe('#parseBody', () => {
describe('when request body exists', () => {
it('it returns the request b... |
Ratzenberger is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Franz Ratzenberger (born 1965), Austrian sprinter
John Ratzenberger (born 1947), American actor, director, producer, writer, and entrepreneur
Roland Ratzenberger (1960–1994), Austrian racing driver
German-language surnames |
The Tunisia men's national under-19 volleyball team (), nicknamed Les Aigles de Carthage (The Eagles of Carthage or The Carthage Eagles), represents Tunisia in international volleyball competitions and friendly matches. The team is one of the leading nations in men's volleyball on the African continent, with eight-time... |
Pidgeon is a surname from an archaic spelling of pigeon.
People
Notable persons with the surname include:
Caroline Pidgeon, Liberal Democrat politician in the United Kingdom
Emily Pidgeon (born 1989), English athlete
Frank Pidgeon (1825-1884), American baseball player
George C. Pidgeon (1872–1971), Canadian reli... |
Yana Qaqa (Quechua yana black, qaqa rock, "black rock", also spelled Yana Ccacca, Yana Kaka, Yana Khakha, Yanacaca, Yanacaja, Yanaccacca, Yanajaja, Yanakaka) may refer to:
Yana Qaqa (Chayanta), a mountain in the Chayanta Province, Potosí Department, Bolivia
Yana Qaqa (Chuquisaca), a mountain in the Chuquisaca Depart... |
The 1995–96 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (known as the Liga Dunhill for sponsorship reasons) was the second season of the Liga Indonesia Premier Division, the top division of Indonesian football. The season began on 26 November 1995 and ended on 6 October 1996. Bandung Raya won the title after beating PSM 2–0 in the... |
```xml
import { SQLDialect } from "./dialect";
import { asString, constVal, ColumnExtendExp } from "./defs";
import { StringBuffer, colExtendExpToSqlStr, ppOut } from "./defs";
import {
SQLValExp,
SQLSelectListItem,
SQLSortColExp,
SQLSelectAST,
SQLQueryAST,
} from "./SQLQuery";
import { ColumnType } from "./C... |
The 1930–31 Chicago Black Hawks season was the team's fifth season in the NHL, and they were coming off a surprising season, in which they finished over .500 for the first time in team history, and making the playoffs after a two-year absence. The Hawks would go on to lose to the Montreal Canadiens in the first round.... |
```ruby
class Zookeeper < Formula
desc "Centralized server for distributed coordination of services"
homepage "path_to_url"
url "path_to_url"
mirror "path_to_url"
sha256 your_sha256_hash
license "Apache-2.0"
head "path_to_url", branch: "master"
bottle do
sha256 cellar: :any, arm64_s... |
Padita Agu is a Nollywood actress who produced the film, My name is not Olosho and became known with film, Last Three digits, She owns a YouTube channel where she share experiences and lessons about relationship with women.
Career
She produced the film My name is not Olosho in which she is also the lead actor starrin... |
Franco Solinas (19 January 1927 – 14 September 1982) was an Italian writer and screenwriter. He is best known for the screenplay of The Battle of Algiers, which was nominated for three Academy Awards. He also wrote the 1969 historical drama ¡Queimada!, starring Marlon Brando. Both films were directed by Gillo Pontecorv... |
Hungarian Rhapsody (German: Ungarische Rhapsodie) is a 1928 German silent drama film directed by Hanns Schwarz and starring Lil Dagover, Willy Fritsch and Dita Parlo. It depicts the life of an impoverished Hungarian aristocrat.
It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios in Berlin and on location in Southern Hungary. Premie... |
On Top may refer to:
On Top (film), a 1982 Icelandic comedy
On Top (album), a 1966 album by the Four Tops
On Top, a 1968 album by the Heptones
On Top, a 2002 album by Rye Coalition
"On Top" (Flume song), 2012
"On Top" (Johnny Ruffo song), 2012
"On Top" (Twista song), 2009
"On Top", a song by the Killers from H... |
EV14 may refer to:
EV14 Waters of Central Europe, a EuroVelo international cycle route
Eurovision Song Contest 2014, a song festival |
Sir William Allmond Codrington Goode (8 June 1907 – 15 September 1986) was a British colonial administrator who served as Governor of Singapore from 1957 to 1959, and Governor of North Borneo from 1960 to 1963.
Early life
Goode was born in Twickenham, Middlesex, and attended Oakham School and Worcester College, Oxfor... |
Wallhalben is a former Verbandsgemeinde ("collective municipality") in the Südwestpfalz district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The seat of the municipality was in Wallhalben. On 1 July 2014 it merged into the new Verbandsgemeinde Thaleischweiler-Wallhalben.
The Verbandsgemeinde Wallhalben consisted of the followi... |
Utricularia jackii is a terrestrial carnivorous plant that belongs to the genus Utricularia. It is endemic to Thailand. U. jackii grows among wet rocks at higher altitudes (around ) or sometimes in evergreen forests. It was first collected in 1927 and again in 1958. In his 1989 revision of his monograph, Peter Taylor d... |
also known as Obu Masakage was a Japanese samurai warrior of the Sengoku period. He is known as one of the "Twenty-Four Generals of Takeda Shingen". He was famous for his red armour and skill in battlefield, and was a personal friend of Takeda Shingen. He was the younger brother of Obu Toramasa who was also a retainer... |
Rogelio Borja Flores (1935 – September 8, 2009) was a Filipino sports writer.
Flores went to the University of Santo Tomas studying philosophy and letters but failed to complete the course, he turned to sports writing shortly after leaving university.
When working for the Times Journal for which he covered events suc... |
G’Ra Asim is a writer and musician, and an assistant professor of Creative Writing at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of Boyz n the Void: a mixtape to my brother, published by Beacon Press. Asim has served as Writing Director at the African American Policy Forum, a gender and race justice think tan... |
Lorange is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
David M. Lorange (born 1979), American coastal guard
Peter Lorange (born 1943), Norwegian economist
Pierre Lorange, Canadian politician
See also
L'Orange (disambiguation) |
Bryn Stephen Halliwell (born 1 October 1980) is an English former football goalkeeper who is currently a goalkeeping coach at Caledonian Braves.
Halliwell started his career in the youth team at London side Wimbledon, before moving in the Scottish Football League with Clyde. After leaving the Cumbernauld side in 2005,... |
The 1896 Iowa Agricultural Cyclones football team represented Iowa Agricultural College (later renamed Iowa State University) as an independent during the 1896 college football season. Under head coach Pop Warner, the Cyclones compiled an 8–2 record, shut out seven of ten opponents, and outscored all opponents by a com... |
Irving Rudolph Pray (December 25, 1886 – August 27, 1948) was an American football coach. He served as the head football coach at Norwich University in Northfield, Vermont from 1913 to 1914 and Louisiana State University (LSU) for part of the 1916 season and for full seasons in 1919 and 1922, compiling a career college... |
9 Tales of Space and Time is an anthology of original science fiction stories edited by Raymond J. Healy, published in hardcover by Henry Holt in 1954. A British edition appeared in 1955, with the title rendered Nine Tales of Space and Time. No paperback editions are reported.
Contents
"The Idealists", John W. Campbe... |
Hypomelus is a genus of beetles of the family Tenebrionidae. It is the type genus of the Hypomelina subtribe.
Selected species
There are about 15 species:
Hypomelus basalis Haag-Rutenberg JG, 1871
Hypomelus flagrans Péringuey LA, 1899
Hypomelus interstitialis Haag-Rutenberg, JG 1871
Hypomelus obliquatus Solier AJJ... |
Electrochemical Energy Reviews is a peer-reviewed scientific journal by Springer Nature. It is published on a quarterly basis. It was established in 2018 and is currently edited by Jiujun Zhang and Xueliang Andy Sun.
Abstracting and indexing
The journal is abstracted and indexed in:
Compendex
DOAJ
Science Citation I... |
Theresa Ann Healy (1932-2016) was the first female American ambassador to Sierra Leone, serving from 1980 until 1983. Healy was a career Foreign Service Officer from 1955 until her retirement in 1995, serving in Naples, Milan, and Bern before her ambassadorship.
Healy was born on July 14, 1932, in New York City to Ant... |
Ciriza is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain.
References
External links
CIRIZA in the Bernardo Estornés Lasa - Auñamendi Encyclopedia (Euskomedia Fundazioa)
Municipalities in Navarre |
SATA Express (sometimes unofficially shortened to SATAe) is a computer bus interface that supports both Serial ATA (SATA) and PCI Express (PCIe) storage devices, initially standardized in the SATA 3.2 specification. The SATA Express connector used on the host side is backward compatible with the standard SATA data con... |
Gary Melvin Begg (born December 29, 1940) is a Canadian retired ice hockey centre and Olympian.
Begg played with Team Canada at the 1964 Winter Olympics held in Innsbruck, Austria.
Begg later became a "lawyer and engineer who developed real estate in Vancouver and Colorado, is now believed to be living aboard a yacht... |
Sagard is a municipality in the Vorpommern-Rügen district, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany.
History
Sagard is first mentioned in 1250 as Zagard. The name of the municipality of Sagard comes from the Slavic and means something like stockade or fortified settlement. This points to a Slavic burgwall from the 12th Ce... |
John Innes may refer to:
John Innes (MP) (1767–1838), Scottish merchant and politician
John Innes (philanthropist) (1829–1904), English philanthropist
John Innes Centre, founded by funds bequeathed by Innes
John Innes compost, developed by the Centre
John Innes (Toronto, Ontario politician) (died 1951), Toronto mun... |
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