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This list of newspapers in Grenada shows known current and historic newspapers that have been published in the southern Caribbean country of Grenada. There have been newspapers in Grenada since 1798.
Current newspapers
The Barnacle News – monthly
The Grenada Informer – weekly - "The fearless weekly that tells it li... |
The handball tournaments at the 2013 Mediterranean Games in Mersin took place between 22 June and 30 June. The men's tournament was held at the Lütfullah Aksungur Sports Hall, while the women's tournament was held at the Yüreğir Serinevler Arena. Both handball venues are in Adana.
Medal table
Medal summary
Events
P... |
Vestri may refer to:
Austri, Vestri, Norðri and Suðri, dwarfs in Nordic mythology
Íþróttafélagið Vestri, an Icelandic sports club
Vestri (football club)
Vestri men's basketball
People with the surname:
Archimede Vestri, Italian patriot and architect of the 19th century
René Vestri (1938–2013), French politician... |
Newton is an unincorporated community in Grays Harbor County, in the U.S. state of Washington.
History
Newton was so named in 1906. A post office called 1908, and remained in operation until 1919.
References
Unincorporated communities in Grays Harbor County, Washington
Unincorporated communities in Washington (state... |
Oxyodes is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae erected by Achille Guenée in 1852.
Description
Palpi upturned and smoothly scaled, where the second joint reaching vertex of head. Third joint long. Antennae almost simple. Thorax and abdomen smoothly scaled and somewhat slender. Tibia spineless. Fore tibia hairy. Fo... |
Damascus Township is one of the thirteen townships of Henry County, Ohio, United States. As of the 2020 census the population was 1,783.
Geography
Located in the eastern part of the county, it borders the following townships:
Washington Township - north
Providence Township, Lucas County - northeast corner
Grand Rapids... |
Motown and Didi is a realistic fiction novel by Walter Dean Myers. It was first published in 1984 by Viking. It is centered on two African-American lovers living in Harlem, New York City, as they navigate ghetto life and their romantic relationship.
Main characters
Motown – One of the main character in the story. He... |
The 2010 World Weightlifting Championships were held at Antalya Expo Center in Antalya, Turkey. The event took place from September 17 to September 26, 2010.
Medal summary
Men
Women
Medal table
Ranking by Big (Total result) medals
Ranking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)
Tea... |
```c++
// Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// path_to_url
#include <libs/vmd/test/test_is_tuple.cxx>
``` |
Common rule awards are a particular form of industrial award used in Australia to regulate minimum terms and conditions of employment. Awards are the end product of the processes of conciliation and arbitration where an industrial tribunal makes an award in settlement of an industrial dispute. Whereas awards are lega... |
Ocoee () is an unincorporated community in Polk County, Tennessee, United States and named after the Cherokee settlement located in the area. Ocoee had a post office until it was severely damaged by a tornado. It still retains its own ZIP code 37361.
Geography
Its elevation is 797 feet (243 m), and it is located at (... |
```java
// or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
// distributed with this work for additional information
// regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
//
// path_to_url
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
// "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR COND... |
Sumo, for the 2013 World Combat Games, took place at the St. Petersburg Sports and Concert Complex Hall 2, in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on the 18 and 19 October 2013.
Medal table
Medal summary
Men
Women
References
External links
World Combat Games Sumo Results
Sumo competitions
2013 World Combat Games events |
Šikić, Sikic is a Croatian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Josip Šikić (born 1929), Croatian footballer
Nada Šikić (born 1955), Croatian politician
Tena Šikić (born 1994), Croatian judoka
Branimir Ivan Sikic, American doctor and scientist
Surnames of Croatian origin |
Haeke (’Aeke) is a divergent and nearly extinct indigenous language of New Caledonia, in the commune of Koné.
References
Languages of New Caledonia
Endangered Austronesian languages
Endangered languages of Oceania
New Caledonian languages |
George Michael: A Different Story is a 2004 documentary film about the English singer, songwriter and record producer George Michael. It follows Michael's life from joining Wham! in 1981, to the present-day covering his career as a solo artist including personal and professional gain and loss. The film is a British ven... |
The 2017–18 season was Wigan Athletic's 86th year in existence and their first back in League One, after being relegated the previous season. Along with competing in the league, the club also participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy. Paul Cook was appointed as manager on 31 May 2017, signing a 3-year deal, fo... |
Billy May (26 September 1865 – 13 October 1936) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Notts County and Burton Swifts.
Early career
Billy May was born in Hull, in, what was then the East Riding of Yorkshire but was from a Nottingham family and at the age of 19 he signed for a Derbyshire footba... |
Gymnopilus fagicola is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Gymnopilus species
External links
Gymnopilus fagicola at Index Fungorum
fagicola
Taxa named by William Alphonso Murrill |
Cleomenes III () was one of the two kings of Sparta from 235 to 222 BC. He was a member of the Agiad dynasty and succeeded his father, Leonidas II. He is known for his attempts to reform the Spartan state.
From 229 to 222 BC, Cleomenes waged war against the Achaean League under Aratus of Sicyon. After being defeated ... |
Volochayevka-1 is a rural locality (a (selo) in Smidovichsky District of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Russia. Population:
References
Rural localities in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast |
Jiangsu Yangtze Metropolitan Belt intercity railway system is a network of 8 regional railways surrounding southern parts of Jiangsu province, China. It is a plan for the gradual implementation of a regional rail system across the region. The system involves Nanjing, Zhenjiang, Changzhou, Wuxi, Suzhou, Yangzhou, Taizh... |
Tikkavarapu Subbarami Reddy (born 17 September 1943) is an Indian industrialist, politician, film producer, and a philanthropist. In 1993 he produced the Sanskrit film Bhagavad Gita, which garnered the National Film Award for Best Feature Film at the 40th National Film Awards.
He is a member of the Indian National Con... |
Jan-Niklas Beste (born 4 January 1999) is a German professional footballer who plays as a winger for club 1. FC Heidenheim.
Club career
After joining Borussia Dortmund at the age of eight, Beste made his competitive debut for the senior squad on 12 August 2017 in a 2017–18 DFB-Pokal match-up against Rielasingen-Arlen... |
A Daughter of the Confederacy is a 1913 American silent film produced by Gene Gauntier Feature Players and distributed by Warner's Features. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with Gene Gauntier and Jack J. Clark in the leading roles.
Cast
Gene Gauntier as Nan, the Girl Spy
Jack J. Clark as Captain Allison
Production... |
Jewish-Muslim Friendship of France (French: Amitié judéo-musulmane de France (AJMF)) is an organization for interfaith dialogue between Jews and Muslims. Founded in 2004 by French Rabbi Michel Serfaty, it is known for its Jewish-Muslim Friendship Bus which travels across France to create meetings and connections with l... |
The New Orleans Pride was a women's professional basketball team located in New Orleans, United States, that competed in the Women's Professional Basketball League, the first women's pro league in the United States, from 1979 to the leagues folding following the 1980-81 WBL season. For both seasons, the team was coache... |
is a fictional character and the protagonist of Capcom's Street Fighter series. Having premiered in the first Street Fighter in 1987, Ryu appears as the game's lead character alongside his best friend and friendly rival Ken Masters. Other games in the series show Ryu to be highly focused on his training, aiming to beco... |
James Andrew Rushing (August 26, 1901 – June 8, 1972) was an American singer and pianist from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S., best known as the featured vocalist of Count Basie's Orchestra from 1935 to 1948.
Rushing was known as "Mr. Five by Five" and was the subject of an eponymous 1942 popular song that was a hit for... |
Mirosternus varicolor is a species of beetle in the family Ptinidae.
References
Further reading
Ptinidae
Beetles described in 1910 |
Lionel Arthur Gilbert CF (8 December 1924 – 28 January 2015) was an Australian historian, author, curator, lecturer, and biographer, specializing in applied, natural, and local history. Born in Burwood, New South Wales, he studied at Sydney Teachers College and, beginning in 1946, worked as a teacher and later a head... |
Opera Nomadi is Italy's largest Romani organisation. It was founded in 1963 to combat discrimination and prejudice against the Romani people. Hostility towards the Romanies in Italy has been growing in recent years and in 2008 the organisation criticised the indifference of Italian to the deaths of two Roma children on... |
Antec, Inc. is a Taiwanese manufacturer of personal computer (PC) components and consumer tech products. Antec's principal products are computer cases and power supplies. Antec also offers PC cooling products, notebook accessories, and previously offered a line of Antec Mobile Products (A.M.P.) which included Bluetooth... |
Montalba-le-Château (; ; ) is a commune in the Pyrénées-Orientales department in southern France.
Geography
Localisation
Montalba-le-Château is located in the canton of La Vallée de la Têt and in the arrondissement of Prades.
Population
See also
Communes of the Pyrénées-Orientales department
References
Communes ... |
Gustáv Mráz (born 11 September 1934) is a former Slovak football player. He played for the Czechoslovakia national team in 11 matches.
Club career
Mráz spent the majority of his career with Czechoslovak First League club Inter Bratislava, scoring twice in 106 league appearances. During the 1964–65 season, Mráz played ... |
was the second vessel to be commissioned in the 19-vessel destroyers built for the Imperial Japanese Navy in the late 1930s under the Circle Three Supplementary Naval Expansion Program (Maru San Keikaku).
Background
The Kagerō-class destroyers were outwardly almost identical to the preceding light cruiser-sized , wit... |
In mathematics, the Borel–Carathéodory theorem in complex analysis shows that an analytic function may be bounded by its real part. It is an application of the maximum modulus principle. It is named for Émile Borel and Constantin Carathéodory.
Statement of the theorem
Let a function be analytic on a closed disc of ... |
William Salisbury (23 February 1899 – 5 January 1965) was a Scottish footballer who played as an outside left for Partick Thistle (where he spent a decade, winning the Scottish Cup in 1921), in England with Liverpool (where he played for a season) and spells with Bangor and Distillery in Northern Ireland plus Shelbourn... |
Phosphorus heptabromide is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is one of the phosphorus bromides. At normal conditions, it forms red prismatic crystals. can be prepared by the sublimation of a mixture of phosphorus pentabromide and bromine.
The structure of consists of a tetrabromophosphonium cation... |
Saul Solomon (1817–1892) was a politician of the Cape Colony.
Saul Solomon may also refer to:
Saul Solomon (photographer) (1836–1929), Australian artist and politician
Saul Solomon (New Zealand barrister) (1857–1937), New Zealand lawyer and King's Counsel (1907)
Saul Solomon (judge) (1875–1960), South African judg... |
"The Bed's Too Big Without You" is a song by British rock band the Police, released as the final single from their second studio album Reggatta de Blanc (1979). It was written by lead vocalist and bassist Sting. An alternate version was released as a single in the UK in 1980 in the set Six Pack in conjunction with the ... |
Brickellia oliganthes is a Mesoamerican species of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae. It is widespread from northern Mexico (Tamaulipas, Nuevo León, Durango, Sinaloa) south as far as Honduras.
References
External links
Photo of herbarium specimen collected in Michoacán
oliganthes
Flora of Mexico
Flora of Cen... |
Huang Zhuofan (born 6 June 2007) is a Chinese artistic gymnast.
At the 2022 Chinese Artistic Gymnastics Championships, sho won silver in the team competition.
She is part of the Chinese team at the 2023 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, taking place in Antwerp, Belgium, from 30 September to 8 October.
Referen... |
This is a list of listed buildings in the parish of Spynie in Moray, Scotland.
List
|}
Key
See also
List of listed buildings in Moray
Notes
References
All entries, addresses and coordinates are based on data from Historic Scotland. This data falls under the Open Government Licence
Spynie |
Regurgitator (also known as Hamburger) is the debut self-titled debut extended play (EP) by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The band was released independently in October 1994 and re-released in February 1995 after signing with East West Records/Warner Music Australia. The EP peaked at number 45 on the ARIA singles ... |
Princess is a 7" single by Sebadoh, released in 1996. It was only available by mail-order.
"Princess" (entitled "Prince-S") would later appear on the album Harmacy.
Track listing
"Princess"
"1/2 Undressed"
"Act of Being Polite" (The Residents cover)
"Moisture" (The Residents cover)
"Suburban Bathers" (The Residents ... |
Tom Fanoe (born 1946) is the President and COO of Joe Boxer.
Prior to Joe Boxer, Tom served as the President of Levi Strauss's US Division, a company he had been a part of for 28 years before his promotion. He has also served as the company's vice president for customer relations. Tom holds an MBA from the Haas School... |
Reetinder Singh Sodhi (born 18 October 1980) is a former Indian cricketer. He was an all-rounder from Punjab and was one of the options that Indian selectors had while looking for an allrounder. He was the key member of India's first under 19 world cup winning team Sodhi made his One Day International debut against Zi... |
Soleyman Tappeh (, also Romanized as Soleymān Tappeh) is a village in Anjirabad Rural District, in the Central District of Gorgan County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 319, in 73 families.
References
Populated places in Gorgan County |
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ui version="4.0">
<class>SearchLineEdit</class>
<widget class="QFrame" name="SearchLineEdit">
<property name="geometry">
<rect>
<x>0</x>
<y>0</y>
<width>400</width>
<height>33</height>
</rect>
</property>
<property name="windowTitle">
<stri... |
Jean Peyrière (born Marie Henri Georges Jean Vaysse, 10 October 1885 – 7 September 1965) was a French stage and film actor. He appeared in several popular serial films during his career.
Biography
Jean Peyrière was born Marie Henri Georges Jean Vaysse in Vesoul, Haute-Saône, Franche-Comté. He began his career in the f... |
Head IV, sometimes subtitled Man with a Monkey, is a 1949 painting by Irish-born British artist Francis Bacon, one of series of works made in 1949 for his first one-man exhibition at the Hanover Gallery, in London. It measures and is held in a private collection.
The painting is part of a series of six works from th... |
Antonio Espinós Ortueta (born 13 October 1947 in Bilbao, Spain), is the current President of the World Karate Federation (WKF) and of the European Karate Federation (EKF). Former member of the Spanish Karate National Team and former President of the Spanish Karate Federation, Mr. Espinós has headed the WKF since 1998 a... |
```php
<?php
/**
* @package TinyMCE
* @author Moxiecode
*/
/** @ignore */
require_once( dirname( dirname( dirname( dirname( __FILE__ ) ) ) ) . '/wp-load.php' );
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=' . get_bloginfo('charset'));
?>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html xmlns="path_to_url" <?php language_attributes(); ?>>
<head>... |
Quindocqua United Methodist Church is a historic United Methodist church located at Marion, Somerset County, Maryland. It is a single-story, roughly cruciform frame building resting on a raised foundation of common bond brick erected in 1913. It features pointed-arch colored glass windows on three sides, fishscale shin... |
Kang Kyung-joon (born February 11, 1983) is a South Korean actor. He made his acting debut in the fifth season of the sitcom Nonstop in 2004, and was the MC of Music Bank from November 6, 2005 to November 19, 2006. After a supporting role in 2012 manga-adapted romantic comedy To the Beautiful You, Kang played leading r... |
Nos futures étoiles was a national music competition and radio program in Canada that was founded by CBC Montreal. It was broadcast annually on CBC Radio from 1947 through 1955. Created as a French-language counterpart to the English-language competition Singing Stars of Tomorrow, it was originally only a singing compe... |
Ileibacterium is a genus from the family of Erysipelotrichidae.
References
Further reading
Erysipelotrichia
Bacteria genera |
The Jazz of the City Atlanta is an historic, color portrait of over 100 jazz musicians surrounding Mayor Shirley Franklin created in the Atlanta City Hall Atrium. Similar to the iconic, black and white, jazz portrait A Great Day in Harlem taken by Art Kane in 1958 — THE JAZZ OF THE CITY ATLANTA 2007 photograph marked a... |
Ibicoara is a municipality in the state of Bahia in the North-East region of Brazil.
See also
List of municipalities in Bahia
References
Municipalities in Bahia |
Vincent Creek () is a meltwater stream, long, flowing north from the north end of Hughes Glacier to the south edge of Lake Bonney in Taylor Valley, Victoria Land. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) in 1996 after Warwick F. Vincent, Universite Laval, Canada; New Zealand limnologist who has conduct... |
A risk–benefit ratio (or benefit-risk ratio) is the ratio of the risk of an action to its potential benefits. Risk–benefit analysis (or benefit-risk analysis) is analysis that seeks to quantify the risk and benefits and hence their ratio.
Analyzing a risk can be heavily dependent on the human factor. A certain level ... |
The 41st New Brunswick general election is scheduled to take place on or before October 21, 2024, according to the Legislative Assembly Act of 2017 which states that an election should be held every four years on the third Monday in October.
Background
Defections and de-registration of the People's Alliance
On March... |
Astragon Entertainment GmbH is a German video game publisher based in Düsseldorf, Germany. Originally a subsidiary of the German video game distributor Astragon Sales & Services GmbH (formerly Rondomedia Marketing & Vertriebs GmbH). The company become known for being the original worldwide publisher of the Farming Simu... |
Kronprinsessegade 40 is a listed property located at the corner of Kronprinsessegade and Dronningens Tværgade in central Copenhagen, Denmark.
History
Early history
The building was constructed by Thomas Blom (1777-1841) in 1811. Blom and his wife Ingeborg née Cathrine Carstensen (died 1860) moved into one of the ap... |
The Bawabet Dimashq (), is a family owned restaurant in Damascus, Syria, that opened in 2002. It is the largest restaurant in the world, as listed by the Guinness World Records.
The structure cost $40 million to construct and is owned by Shaker al Samman. The restaurant has a 54,000 sq-m dining area, 2,500 sq-m kitche... |
Lichenaula mochlias is a moth in the family Xyloryctidae. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1890. It is found in Australia, where it has been recorded from Victoria.
The wingspan is about 26 mm. The forewings are light grey, closely irrorated (sprinkled) with dark fuscous and with a slender transverse blackish str... |
Elizabeth Jacobs (born 26 February 1989) is an Australian female acrobatic gymnast. With partners Amy Lang and Elodie Rousseau Forwood, Jacobs achieved 6th in the 2014 Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships.
References
1989 births
Living people
Australian acrobatic gymnasts
Female acrobatic gymnasts
21st-century Au... |
This is a list of all the United States Supreme Court cases from volume 345 of the United States Reports:
External links
1953 in United States case law |
Ramotswa is a village in South-East District of Botswana, southwest of the capital of Gaborone. The population was 27,760 in 2011 census.
It is the tribal capital of the BaLete, an ethnic majority springing from the Nguni tribe.
Ramotswa's main industry is a wheat flour mill. The village also manufactures metal produc... |
Bryndís Haraldsdóttir (born 1976) is an Icelandic politician who is a member of the Althing representing the Southwest constituency. She is also the 25th and incumbent president of the West Nordic Council, succeeding the former prime minister of Greenland, Lars-Emil Johansen in 2016.
References
External links
Biogr... |
James F. Hamlet (December 13, 1921 – January 5, 2001) was the second African American United States Army Major General and division commander. Hamlet served as commander of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division during the Vietnam War and later commanded the 4th Infantry Division.
Early life and education
Hamlet was bo... |
Sporobolus texanus is a species of grass known by the common name Texas dropseed. It is native to the western United States.
This species is a perennial bunchgrass with fibrous roots. The stems grow long and may be erect or decumbent. The leaf blades are up to 18 cm long, but are generally shorter. The panicle is an ... |
Several concepts from mathematics and physics are named after the mathematician and astronomer Joseph-Louis Lagrange, as are a crater on the Moon and a street in Paris.
Lagrangian
Lagrangian analysis
Lagrangian coordinates
Lagrangian derivative
Lagrangian drifter
Lagrangian foliation
Lagrangian Grassmannian
Lagrangian... |
The Côtes-d'Armor (, ; ; , ), formerly known as Côtes-du-Nord until 1990 (, ), is a department in the north of Brittany, in northwestern France. In 2019, it had a population of 600,582.
History
Côtes-du-Nord was one of the original 83 departments created on 4 March 1790 following the French Revolution. It was made up... |
Joan Muysken (born 18 December 1948, in Delft) is a Dutch professor emeritus of Economics at the Maastricht University.
Higher education
Muysken received his PhD in Economics from the University of Groningen on the aggregation of production functions.
Academic career
Muysken is currently professor of economics at the... |
```objective-c
class ATL_NO_VTABLE CMySingletonClass :
public CComObjectRootEx<CComSingleThreadModel>,
public CComCoClass<CMySingletonClass, &CLSID_MySingletonClass>,
public IMySingletonClass
{
public:
DECLARE_CLASSFACTORY_SINGLETON(CMySingletonClass)
// Remainder of class declaration omitted.
``` |
Xia Xiaowan () (born 1959 in Beijing, China) is a painter.
Biography
In 1982, Xia graduated from the Third Studio of Oil Painting Department of the Central Academy of Fine Arts. The following year, he became Art Editor for China Machinery Publishing, leaving in 1984.
Xia currently lives in Beijing, working as a profe... |
Lee Young-min (; born 20 December 1973) is a South Korean former footballer and current manager of Bucheon FC 1995. He played as defender.
Career
He was appointed as an interim manager of FC Anyang on 16 June 2015. He was promoted to full-time manager on 9 November.
References
1973 births
Living people
Men's associa... |
The NWA Americas Tag Team Championship was a professional wrestling tag team title in the National Wrestling Alliance's NWA Hollywood Wrestling based out of Los Angeles, California.
The championship began as the WWA World Tag Team Championship for Worldwide Wrestling Associates in 1964. However, when WWA became an NWA... |
Billy Porter (born 1969), is an American actor, Broadway performer, singer.
Billy Porter may also refer to:
Billy Porter (criminal) (1850–?), American burglar and underworld figure in New York City
Billy Porter (Australian footballer) (1875–1910), Australian rules footballer
Billy Porter (footballer, born 1905) (1905... |
"Don't Cry, Joe (Let Her Go, Let Her Go, Let Her Go)" is a popular song written by Joe Marsala, and recorded by Johnny Desmond on May 21, 1949.
Frank Sinatra recording
The recording was released by MGM (catalog number 10518) and reached #22 on the Billboard chart. Frank Sinatra recorded an effective version that reac... |
Tegea () was a town of ancient Crete, which, according to legend, was founded by Agamemnon.
The editors of the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World note the tentative suggestion of its site as near modern Deliana, but ultimately leave it as unlocated.
References
Populated places in ancient Crete
Former popu... |
```c++
#ifndef BOOST_MPL_REPLACE_IF_HPP_INCLUDED
#define BOOST_MPL_REPLACE_IF_HPP_INCLUDED
//
// (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// path_to_url
//
// See path_to_url for documentation.
// $Id$
// $Date$
// $Revision$
#include <boost/mpl/transform.hpp>
#include <boost/mpl/apply.hpp>
#include <boos... |
A Blueprint for Murder is a 1953 American film noir thriller film directed and written by Andrew L. Stone and starring Joseph Cotten, Jean Peters and Gary Merrill.
Plot
Whitney "Cam" Cameron (Joseph Cotten) arrives at a hospital to be with his widowed sister-in-law Lynne (Jean Peters), whose stepdaughter Polly has die... |
Crambus sjoestedti is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by Per Olof Christopher Aurivillius in 1910. It is found in Kenya, South Africa, Sudan and Tanzania.
References
Crambini
Moths described in 1910
Moths of Africa |
Vadym Vasylyovych Hudzinskyi (; born 2 July 2001) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a central midfielder for Ukrainian club Ahrobiznes Volochysk.
References
External links
Profile on Ahrobiznes Volochysk official website
2001 births
Living people
Ukrainian men's footballers
Men's association foo... |
Dominique Atkins (born 29 April 1970) is a British jazz and dance singer from London. She has been a member of such groups as Grace and The Space Brothers, among others. Her hit singles include "Not Over Yet", "Skin On Skin", "If I Could Fly", "Down To Earth", and "I Want To Live". She co-wrote and sang on Tilt's 1999... |
Anabel Medina Garrigues was the defending champion, but retired in the second round against Kristina Barrois.
Aravane Rezaï won the title, defeating Lucie Hradecká in the final 7–6(7–2), 6–1.
Seeds
Anabel Medina Garrigues (second round, retired due to a lower back injury)
Sybille Bammer (first round)
Peng Shua... |
"Jika" is a single by South African rapper AKA taken from his third studio album Touch My Blood. It was re-released on 21 January 2019 through Beam Group, features guest appearance from frequent collaborator Yanga Chief, and production from KDDO.
In 2020 the single won South African Music Award for Best Music Video of... |
Dallas: J.R. Returns is a 1996 American made-for-television drama film and is the first of two Dallas reunion films, produced after the series went off the air in 1991. It originally aired on CBS on November 15, 1996, and was rerun as part of TV Land's salute to 50 years of Warner Bros. Television.
Plot summary
The c... |
Achacachi Municipality is one of six municipalities of the Omasuyos Province in the La Paz Department in Bolivia. Its seat is Achacachi.
The municipality is situated in the northern Altiplano of the Bolivian Andes region on the eastern shore of Lake Titicaca bordered to the north by the Larecaja Province, to the east... |
Wang Zhenduo (, 1911–1992), whose courtesy name was Tianmu (), was a Chinese historian, archaeologist and museologist, and is considered one of the founders of the history of Chinese technology.
Early life and education
Wang was born in Baoding, Hebei Province into a wealthy land-owning family. His father, Wang Zong... |
Monotoca glauca, known as goldy wood, is a heath family shrub endemic to Tasmania, Australia and is one of 17 described Monotoca species. It is a widespread and abundant understory species found on the margins of wet eucalypt forests and logged areas.
Description
Monotoca glauca is an evergreen, densely branched shrub... |
The 23rd Annual Latin Grammy Awards ceremony was held on Thursday, November 17, 2022, at the Michelob Ultra Arena, Las Vegas to honour the best musical releases within Latin music released from June 1, 2021, to May 31, 2022. The nominations were announced via a virtual livestream on September 20, 2022, presented by Kan... |
Acanthochitona crinita is a species of marine chiton in the family Acanthochitonidae. It is found on rocky coasts in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea.
Description
Acanthochitona crinita is oval, less than half as long as it is wide, and grows to a length of about . Like other ch... |
Roscommon is a town in Ireland.
Roscommon may also refer to:
Other places
County Roscommon, in Ireland
Roscommon, Michigan, village in the United States
Roscommon County, Michigan, county in the United States
Roscommon Township, Michigan, township in the United States
Constituencies
Roscommon (Parliament of Ireland ... |
The Harbour Heat were a New Zealand basketball team based in Auckland. The Heat competed in the National Basketball League (NBL) and played their home games at North Shore Events Centre.
Team history
The Harbour Heat, then known as North Shore, started in the second-tiered Conference Basketball League (CBL). After win... |
Cephalotes squamosus is a species of arboreal ant of the genus Cephalotes, characterized by an odd shaped head and the ability to "parachute" by steering their fall if they drop off of the tree they're on. Giving their name also as gliding ants.
References
squamosus |
Sarah Bilston is a British author and professor of English literature at Trinity College, Hartford. Bilston was born in Suffolk and studied at University College London and Somerville College, Oxford. She currently resides in Connecticut with her husband and three children. She has written three books: The Awkward Age ... |
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